FLOWER SHOWS
Flower shows have
played a very important role in most gardeners’ lives. This is the place where
plants can be seen at their best, new landscape design from professionals and
colleges is on display and new plants appear so we can try out something
different. The competitive gardener can also compete with others to see who can
grow the best plants in the show. The shows are a meeting place for gardening
friends, and now come with a huge range of other entertaining events including
food, drink, forestry, art, live bands and dancers. There are so many plants of
every description grown to perfection on display and for sale that it is
impossible to leave the show without at least one must have essential plant.
Most shows have a sell off on the last hour of the last day when bargain
hunters have a field day, and traders try to reduce their stock as they really
do not want to take it all back home. Even composts, fertiliser, rock dust,
hanging baskets and large specimen plants are all there for the taking at
hugely reduced costs. The mass exodus of people and plants leaving at the end
of a show with a smile on their face and struggling home with huge plants is a
very entertaining sight. My first flower show was in the Dundee Ice Rink over
fifty years ago, and I have been going to one or other show ever since.
Although I go as a visitor, I have attended many shows as a trader.
Anna with white clematis |
I had three years
displaying paintings in the art marquee at Hampton Court Palace Flower Show,
then several years selling a range of plants including saskatoons at Ingliston
in Edinburgh and Camperdown Park in Dundee. Traders are a very friendly and
helpful group and friendships are made at every event.
One year at
Ingliston I found my onion hoe in constant use ever since, plus a bag of rock
dust and a bag of compost made from sheep wool and bracken and Anna got her
Peonia Doreen, then the next year at Camperdown I think Anna got the national
collection of Heucheras which she just could not resist. The shows always leave
you with great memories of the plants you find, the people you meet and for me
one great afternoon at Ingliston was hearing the Red Hot Chilli Pipers playing
Snow Patrols Chasing Cars. Fantastic music on a lovely summer’s day.
Camperdown Park
hosts our local food and flower show in early September and further afield at
Ingliston in Edinburgh Gardening Scotland has a massive show on now from 3rd
to 5th June 2016, then in August the Southport Flower show is on
from 18th to 21st August 2016.
In the Midlands in
rural Malvern the RHS put on a spring festival in May then an autumn show at
the end of September at the Three Counties show ground.
Peonia Doreen |
For those visiting
London a visit to see the Hampton Court Palace Flower Show from 5th
to 10th July 2016 is an unmissable experience. Although I attended
three shows as a trader, I still had plenty time to see the show as fellow
traders looked after my stand as I took a wee break.
However it is the
Chelsea Flower Show held at the end of last month that has the most prestige.
It is not the biggest show, but held in the highest regard. Exhibiting with the
RHS at Chelsea would be most exhibitors dream. Chelsea is where you can see
Royals and celebrities from the gardening world as well as entertainers, past
and present, and the countries best garden designers will create a modern
vision of how a garden can look. As a gardener it is always the use of plants
that has the biggest impact for me, but the creative use of hard landscaping,
integrating the house into the outdoor environment has been really outstanding.
Visitors to Kew Gardens |
The Royal family
gives great support to this show and look out for Mr Motivator, Twiggy, Dame
Judi Dench and Jeremy Paxman and a host of other very famous faces from the
world of entertainment.
Wee jobs around the garden
Lift young leek
plants grown from seed in an outdoor drill and after a gentle top and tail
transplant them into dibbled holes about six inches deep, spacing them six
inches apart. Water them in to secure them.
END