 This has been a very special project. We've partnered with the amazing Kangan Institute and Bendigo TAFE to create our very own fully accessible sensory garden. A sensory garden that's been designed to touch, smell and taste. Even though you're blind, you can still garden actually. If anything, it's more of an incentive to have some plants around you even if they're in pots. It just makes you feel a lot better. There's been a lot of people around to guide you through. I love to the Braille. I'm learning Braille at the moment, so it's good to be able to have a practice. Everything's been quite smelly in a good way and I've been able to touch everything, so I love that. Guide dogs have led our students down pathways that we could never have thought of. There's 40 students that have never built one of these things before and they managed to pull this off and it looks fantastic. Over the course of the show, thousands of visitors joined guide dog staff and volunteers to experience the sensory garden. It's a really wonderful atmosphere and yeah, it's just a great day to be alive in Melbourne at the Garden Show.