Regular readers will know that RHS Chelsea Flower Show is one of my very favourite shows of the year. I just love the thrill of wandering around the huge site and seeing all the new and exciting things intermixed with some favourites that return from year to year. There are still some favourite stands that have not returned (I hope the word to insert here is 'yet') following the pandemic but this has created new space and new is good too. Anyhoo, I shall start with looking at some of the gardens that particularly caught my eye.
This is my favourite garden: the Nurture Landscapes Garden designed by Sarah Price which is the creation of the artist Cedric Morris's 'lost' garden at his home 'Benton End'. I am more than pleased that this garden has won a Gold Medal. What I love about this garden is that it completely invokes the feeling of a Morris floral painting. It has the most wonderful muted palette and it looks quite different from any other garden at the show. It stands out.
It is a masterclass in planting and the use of colour. The irises are a crucial part of this garden: Morris was a breeder of more than 90 cultivars of iris, some of which are currently lost but collections are being built up of them and notably at Beth Chatto Plants and Gardens. I love the colour of the iris used in this garden. I would not usually have looked at such a colour, far too pastel for me and yet..... This is a triumph of a garden.
A 'gosh' of a garden designed by Jihae Hwang representing a 'herbal medicinal colony' in Eastern Korea where there is the last primeval forest in the country.
The garden is planted with native and rare species from Korea and it is just magnificent. One of those gardens that just calms you as you look at it. This garden also won a gold medal.
The R SPCA Garden designed by Martyn Wilson is one I made a bee-line to see. Sadly these are not my photos as for some reason the one I took of this garden was rather (very) unfocussed! Regular readers will recall that Martyn, recently took part in my interview series 'The Questions', so it was a pleasure to see the completed garden and meet the man himself.
This is one of the stunning 'dead hedge' containers, that contain dead sticks wood that are so useful for wildlife and yet look very beautiful too. You can sit on them as a bench and it has hedgehog holes so that creatures can rest in them safely. I really like this idea, I do have dead wood around the edges of my garden but not everyone wants to do this. They might want to be wild-life friendly but within their own style; so to have this as a central feature like this is fantastic. Many of you will know that I have a cat or five and the work that the RSPCA does is incredible. The garden won a silver gilt medal, I hope it wasn't my blurry photography that caused that..... but word 'robbed' sprang to mind and Martyn should be very proud of his and his team's achievement.
This is the RBC Brewin Dolphin Garden designed by Paul Hervey Brooks. On press day you often get 'stuff' going on to attract photographers to a garden. I do not know the names of these two young people, but I had a serious 'League of Gentleman' moment when looking at them and kept thinking of Legz Akimbo, I admit it was that they did just seem to be all legs but it sent me down a rabbit-hole in my mind. I saw from a distance Reece Shearsmith later on my travels which did not help me shake this idea. I wonder if I nside No 9 could write a flower show episode..... This garden won a Silver Gilt medal and in my purely subjective judgement, I thought it should have been a gold.
I particularly liked how the snowball heads of the viburnum (is it a viburnum?) pick up the white sculptures on the far side of the garden. I got quite transfixed by this.
The Myeloma UK Garden: A life worth living garden was designed by Chris Beardshaw and won a deserved gold medal. This is another garden with a good use of irises. Myeloma is a type of blood cancer and not curable but it is treatable. This garden is about calm and being restored by nature. As you would expect (well as I would expect anyway) from Chris Beardshaw, the planting is second to none. It is a great garden.
The Centrepoint Garden designed by Cleve West also won a gold medal. It is about nature taking over a partly demolished house and it is about homelessness and the impact on young people in particular. It is superbly planted and a lot of the plants are, well, weeds; which is what you would expect when nature is reclaiming. If it was to be a picture of my house being reclaimed by weeds it would be largely brambles and hawthorn trees. I think it is very beautiful and it is making a very important point.
The Memoria and Greenacres Transendance Garden was designed by Gavin McMillan and Andrew Wilson is at first sight dominated by this huge structure. However the closer you get the more the planting starts carrying you along.
Lots of white poppies and, of course, irises. These iris are the most incredible colour and the combination with the white is just perfect.
This is the last garden I will feature today, this vision of bright colour and beauty is possibly the most special garden of the show. It is a feature garden so not in the medal competition and it is the RHS Eastern Eye Garden of Unity designed by Manoj Malde and reflects his background in the fashion industry and his Indian heritage. I really love this garden, the colours sang to me and the planting is exquisite. But why is it the most special garden I hear you ask? Because on Monday Press Day morning, Manoj married to his partner, Clive Gilmor. This is the first wedding to take place at the Chelsea Flower Show. I was not there at the time and it was before many people arrived which I was told by someone who was there made it have even more of a special feel about it. My sincere congratulations to the happy couple, I wish them every happiness.