Monday, July 25, 2011

RHS Tatton, some musings

Best in Show - Save a life, drop the knife
I love RHS Tatton Park Flower Show. I love it because it is held in the North-West and is our very own little piece of Chelsea - well not quite but as good as. It gives northern designers and growers the chance to show their talents and you don't have to travel to London to enjoy it. There is space and fresh Cheshire air, room to tootle about and (apart from those blasted plant trolley things) nothing in your way to prevent you getting a good gander at the gardens.

I felt rather smug this year that I correctly picked the winner of the RHS Young Designer of the Year. The odds on this were not that great because there are only three finalists, but nevertheless, I was so impressed with Daniela Coray's lovely 'A Stitch in Time Saves Nine' that I just knew she had to be the winner and so she was. Daniela specialises in environmentally aware approaches to garden design and her lovely, peaceful garden really drew me in. It was designed as an engaging and restorative place and so it was and certainly met with approval by the visitors to the show.

There were some challenging gardens this year, or rather gardens with challenging messages. The Best in Show went to 'Save a Life, Drop the Knife' and the Best Visionary Garden went to the Design Charity on behalf of Survivors Fund (SURF). Not so much a garden really but a metaphor for a Rwandan refugee's flight to freedom. Those brave enough to go inside the 'jungle' certainly came out with a stark impression of what it must have been like to experience those terrible years in Rwanda during the war. Quite moving in fact and not easily forgotten.

I love the Flower Bed competition and always marvel at the quirky ideas that the different local authorities and community groups come up with for this category. Bournemouth's 'A Novel Approach' was a worthy winner. My personal favourite was Birmingham's Iconic Mini and I also liked 'Arthur's Waterloo' by Partington Parish Council. This type of bedding is not to all tastes but there is a lot of hard work that goes into these displays and I think its great that our municipal gardeners get the chance to show their talents and get some praise for a change.

There seemed to be a lot of purple and blue on gardens, with one garden - Black and Blue - designed by Clive Scott winning a Gold. I like colour, so black and blue doesn't really do it for me, but obviously the judges thought Clive's clever quirky garden did it for them, hence the Gold. I have to hand it to Clive that designing a garden with a colour palette of black-purple-blue is no easy ticket and the effect was nothing if not stunning - just not for me.

Sue Beesley's 'Grasses with Grace' was easily a contender for Best Show Garden. It was absolutely delightful with a graceful colour palette and stunning early flowering ornamental grasses. Sue is rightly chuffed with her Gold - well deserved.

Finchale Training College's 'The Schedule' was excellent and if I was feeling a bit down with the Knife Crime message and the Rwandan jungle experience, now I was propelled into a paroxysm of unsurpassed joy by the sight of this lovely allotment. Well done to all the Finchale Students who produced this great and interesting garden.

Oxfam's 'When the Waters Rise' (Gold) highlighted their 'Grow' Campaign for better ways to grow, share and live together. I really liked this garden and felt that it achieved all its aims in making us understand the various methods being used to adapt to climate change.

The show site has been redesigned this year and seemed much easier to get around than in previous years. The weather on the day of my visit was reasonable, sunny periods and thankfully no rain. Tatton can be unlucky with the weather, although having said that I have sheltered from the odd thunderstorm and gales at RHS Hampton too!

Below are a few more of the gardens for your delectation:

Colourful and cheerful NSPCC Garden  





A Stitch in Time Saves Nine - Winner of the Young Designer of the Year    



Iconic Mini      





Serenity, Russell Watkinson Landscapes



    
Bournemouth's winning Flower Bed   


Pip Probert's Chocolate Orange


So until next year ........ 

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