The Garden - Marcus Barnett
Transcription
The Garden - Marcus Barnett
RHS Chelsea Flower Show Silver-Gilt; The President’s Award Gold; The Diamond Jubilee Award Gold Pattaya City & Nong Nooch Tropical Botanical Garden from Thailand (above) turned many heads with one of the boldest exhibits in the Great Pavilion, a colourful temple made of orchids. The Diamond Jubilee Award was received by Birmingham City Council (left) which staged a superb display celebrating the 300th anniversary of Birmingham Cathedral. The UK Space Agency (above) launched an initiative, aided by the RHS Campaign for School Gardening, enabling schools to apply for salad rocket seeds that have been to the International Space Station. The President’s Award went to Harperley Hall Farm Nurseries, Co. Durham (right), which displayed a sumptuous collection of choice woodland plants. Chelsea Flower Show 2015 RHS From the magnificent splendour of Great Pavilion exhibits to varied designs in three categories again brimming with horticultural excellence. Here are some highlights from the gardens, of gardens, the RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2015 (sponsored by M&G Investments) was once plant exhibits and show features Photography: Sarah Cuttle, Neil Hepworth and Tim Sandall A rare moment of calm in the Great Pavilion, where more than 100 colourful, carefully designed displays were bursting with blooms at the peak of perfection. Ranging from floristry to the science of horticulture and outstanding exhibits of all kinds (such as those pictured above), there was something to cater for everyone’s tastes. 72 The Garden | July 2015 » July 2015 | The Garden 73 RHS Chelsea Flower Show ‘The Laurent-Perrier Chatsworth Garden’ Add texture and interest to low formal hedging by cutting parts to different heights and widths – simple but effective, especially deployed against lush, informal planting. 74 The Garden | July 2015 Design: Cook’s Garden Centre Design: Adam Frost; Garden: The homebase urban retreat garden, in association with Macmillan Cancer Support Design: james basson Garden: A perfumer’s Garden in Grasse Designer Graham Bodle made beautiful use of large sculptural pieces of deadwood, giving the garden a wild, stag’s horn look. Large rocks and tree-stump seats, combined with a limited planting palette of pines, grasses, maples and other understated plants, were woven into an evocative – and distinctly sculptural – whole. (Sponsors: Doncaster Deaf School; Walker’s Nurseries.) Design: drointon nurseries Plants with vertical forms can bring a border to life. Here, purple Salvia nemorosa ‘Caradonna’, Lupinus ‘Masterpiece’, pink Verbascum and Camassia harmonise. If a structural element lets light in, why not underplant it – or even the seat – perhaps with doughty hart’s tongue ferns and Saxifraga x urbium (London pride)? ‘The Sculptor’s Picnic Garden by Walker’s Nurseries’ Break from traditional garden lighting by threading systems through plants and winding around branches. Unobtrusive and organic by day, they glow softly by night. Cylinders of corrugated galvanised metal can turn a paved area or patio of any size into a garden – simply arrange them on top of a thick mulch. Reusing household items can provide opportunities to make highlights from the ordinary, such as this sculptural ‘bug hotel’ crafted from rusted cans. Although many gardeners do not have room for a traditional auricula theatre, a contemporary, temporary, alternative is to display pots on stepladders. Design: sarah eberle and tom hare Garden: Breast Cancer Haven Garden supported by nelsons Gold; Best Fresh Garden Gold; Best Artisan Garden Design: Sean Murray The Great Chelsea Garden Challenge winner The bent, rusted metal structure lending the garden such visual dynamism was designed by Howard Miller to depict the effects of invisible dark matter on the universe – its gravity bending everything, including light. (Sponsors: Science and Technology Facilities Council, Liverpool John Moores University, Urbis Design.) Amid the excitement of every Chelsea Flower Show, it is easy to miss some of the considered details. Here are some ideas that could translate to gardens of a more typically domestic scale. Design: Chris Beardshaw Garden: The Morgan Stanley Healthy Cities Garden ‘Dark Matter Garden for the National Schools’ Observatory’ Ideas to take home from Chelsea 2015 Design: Chris Beardshaw Garden: The Morgan Stanley Healthy Cities Garden Designed by Dan Pearson, this remarkable tour de force of naturalistic planting was named Best Show Garden. In the difficult ‘triangle’ site – viewable from all angles – it used 300 tonnes of rocks from Chatsworth (and three tonnes of leafmould) to evoke the estate’s Trout Stream and its Rock Garden, begun by head gardener Joseph Paxton in 1842. It was based on some of the lesser-known aspects of the 43ha (105 acre) garden at the Derbyshire estate, to which it has been returned after the show. (Sponsors: Champagne Laurent-Perrier, Chatsworth.) Design: Howard miller design; Garden: dark matter garden for the National schools’ observatory Gold; Best Show Garden Adding a hard landscape edge between a lawn and border can eliminate the need for edging. These ‘mowing strips’ act as buffer zones between turf and flowerbed. Large slices of wood with the bark left on make wonderfully natural, low-rising steps with a rustic appearance – an interesting alternative to stone or planed timber. July 2015 | The Garden » 75 RHS Chelsea Flower Show New and interesting plants from the show Chelsea Plant of the Year ‘The Breakthrough Breast Cancer Garden’ p10 Drawing inspiration from the genetic research funded by the charity, Ruth Willmott’s garden was based on the DNA double helix. It featured a curved stone pathway crossed by ribbons of pink planting; a green and white planting scheme provided the backdrop. (Sponsor: Breakthrough Breast Cancer.) From the Great Pavilion came a selection of choice plants and eagerly anticipated new introductions. Silver-Gilt; RHS People’s Choice Fresh Garden Award Gold Zantedeschia ‘Flamingo’ Viola ‘Frilly Dilly’ Clematis Liberty (‘Zo08095’) Hardy, pale pink arum lily, shorter and more compact than its white relation. Available from Burncoose Nursery, Cornwall at £10; 01209 860316. Upright stems good for cutting, with frilly, scented long-lasting cream blooms ageing to a soft mauve-blue. Available 2016. Victorian Violas, Lincs; 01522 686343. Raspberry-pink blooms with yellow anthers in May–June and August. Good in pots and beds; will reach 1.8m (6ft). Thorncroft Clematis, Norfolk at £15; 01953 850407. Camassia leichtlinii ‘Maybelle’ Dianthus Mojito(‘Wp15Pie41’) Geum ‘Sea Breeze’ Flowering in late-April–May, this hardy cultivar, with intense blue flowers, is a good choice for heavier soils. £6.50 for five bulbs from Avon Bulbs, Somerset; 01460 242177. One of five new scented garden pinks from Whetman Pinks, Devon. Hardy, droughttolerant, with long stems and large flowers. Plugs are £1.75 each; 01626 863328. Bright flowers about 5cm (2in) across with folded, wavy petals. Full sun or part shade reaching 60cm (2ft). Shown by the Hardy Plant Society, Kent Group; 01386 710317. Rosa The Ancient Mariner (‘Ausoutcry’) Raspberry Ruby Beauty (‘Nr7’) Trillium ‘Green Frost’ Multi-branching, thornless form bearing masses of summer fruits on bushes of just 90cm (3ft) high. £17.99 for a plant in a 3-litre pot. Thompson & Morgan; 0844 573 1818. Seed-raised hybrid from Harveys Garden Plants, Suffolk with beautifully marked foliage and dark purple flowers. Plants in 1-litre pots cost £20 each; 01359 233363. Vigorous rose with myrrh-scented blooms from June to first frost. David Austin Roses, Wolverhampton, £18.50; 01902 376300. 76 The Garden | July 2015 ‘The Homebase Urban Retreat Garden, in association with Macmillan Cancer Support’ Designed as an urban community garden, Adam Frost’s creation celebrated the striking design principles of the Bauhaus movement. Modernist materials such as concrete and Corten steel were combined with geometric shapes to demonstrate how green space can be incorporated into our towns and cities, blending and contrasting hardedged structures with the softness of nature. (Sponsor: Homebase.) Giving front gardens a new look In support of the RHS campaign Greening Grey Britain, Sean Murray, winner of the BBC’s Great Chelsea Garden Challenge, showed that car parking space need not evict plants. ✤ Cumbrian slate appeared throughout the garden in different forms. In the drive (foreground), slate slabs and chippings, loose and also laid edgeways, provided a permeable, textured surface. ✤ To contrast the grey slate, planting softened the edges. Hostas, violas, grasses and sedges blurred boundaries. Low-growing plants such as Ajuga and Asarum nestled between the driveway tracks. ✤ Monolithic, structural, black beams injected a sense of height to the garden and also provided a stark contrast to the grey stone. Climbing roses on some of the beams helped to relieve their severity. July 2015 | The Garden 77 » RHS Chelsea Flower Show Silver-Gilt; BBC / RHS People’s Choice Show Garden Award ‘Sentebale - Hope in Vulnerability’ Matt Keightley’s design was completed in conjunction with Prince Harry and evoked the native environmental characteristics of Lesotho. Inspired by the Mamohato Children’s Centre, due to open there this year, the garden featured a central pavilion with striking columns, a lively waterfall and colourful planting reminiscent of the landscape. (Sponsor: The David Brownlow Charitable Foundation.) ‘The Telegraph Garden’ Providing a more formal element to the show, this garden (inspired by early 20th-century Dutch art movement De Stijl) was built around a strong rectilinear geometry and bold blocks of planting. Feature walls punctuated the boundary hedges in stark contrast to the plants while trees and low hedges of yew (Taxus baccata) and hornbeam (Carpinus betulus) acted as the main structural elements among a series of paths and waterways. (Design: Marcus Barnett; sponsor: The Telegraph.) More on Chelsea For more on the RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2015 visit: www.rhs.org.uk/chelsea ✤ Download the full medals lists for all the garden and Great Pavilion categories, along with the Best in Show awards. ✤ Browse profiles of all the gardens, and find inspiring elements for your own plot. ✤ View highlights from the Great Pavilion including the 2015 RHS Chelsea Plant of the Year (see News, p10). ✤ Watch videos from the show including Greening Grey Britain with Chris Young, Editor of The Garden, and plant highlights with Assistant Editor, Phil Clayton. 78 The Garden | July 2015 Gold