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Gardeners and non-gardeners alike will flock to Tatton Park next week. The RHS flower show is mecca for flower enthusiasts and garden lovers in the North West.  The show is packed with gorgeous plants, garden inspiration and lots of goodies to buy.  It starts Wednesday 18th and runs for five days until Sunday 22nd.  If you plan to visit on Sunday, stay until the end of the day for the plant sale, when you might get a few bargains as exhibits are sold off.

The RHS Young Garden Designer of the Year competition takes place at Tatton Flower Show.  The competition is open to garden designers aged 28 or under.  Entries were submitted in January and the three finalists were short listed to compete at Tatton.  Andrew Percival, 26 from Northwich is creating a public garden designed to be used 24 hours a day in an urban setting.  Katharine Wills, 25 from London, has named her garden A Prison Garden for rehabilitation through Well-Being, using colours and design to encourage social interaction and stimulate peaceful and uplifting sensations.  Tristen Knight, 28 from Hertfordshire has designed a garden to show how forgotten industrial buildings on brown field sites can be resurrected and transformed into places of beauty.

An exciting new category this year is Orchestra gardens.  Four show gardens have been designed to reflect a different part of an orchestra.  The gardens represent string, brass, woodwind and percussion.  The category will inspire visitors to think differently about gardens and show how you can combine gardening with other passions. The Visionary Garden section is designed to challenge traditional perceptions of gardens.  By combining art and sculpture with horticulture, the aim is to break the boundaries of conventional garden design.

Paradise-Isle-by-Sam-Youd-2011

School children from around the North West are also getting involved in gardening at Tatton.  21 primary schools are taking part in the Jubilant Diamond Jubilee container competition, which celebrates the Queens’s 60 year reign. Visitors can vote for their favourite entry and the winning schools will be awarded garden centre vouchers.  Schools have been growing their own plants for the small, Front-to-Front Gardens as well.  These small gardens are 3m x 3m and are inspired by children’s television programmes.  Characters from The Magic roundabout, Postman Pat and Doctor Who will feature in the designs.

This years National Flowerbed Competition is themed around sports, to celebrate this years Olympics.  Lancaster City Council is creating a bed themed on cycling.  It will highlight the coast-to-coast cycle route, the Way of Roses that links Morecambe and Bridlington.  Other sports represented include archery, swimming, canoeing, long jump and running.

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For five days the grounds of the Royal Hospital are transformed into RHS Chelsea Flower show.  Sprawling over a massive 11 acres, the show promises to be a feast for the senses.  Gardeners, growers and designers from around the world visit Chelsea to see fabulous show gardens, breath taking flowers and the latest trends for the home and garden.

Chelsea officially starts next Tuesday and runs through until Saturday.   The recent wet weather hasn’t put visitors off; all 157,000 tickets from the RHS are sold out.  Some tickets are now being sold online by ticket touts for up to £300!  If you haven’t managed to get a ticket, follow the TV coverage which starts with a sneak preview on Sunday at 5pm on BBC One.

The Queen will visit the show on Monday to view the special exhibits designed for her Diamond Jubilee and new plants named after the Royal family. There will also be an exhibition of photographs of the Queen at Chelsea and a flower bed commissioned for the Jubilee.

There are 16 show gardens this year created by some of the world’s best designers.  Andy Sturgeon is designing an arts & crafts garden for the show sponsors M&G Investments.  Cleve West, who won Best Show Garden last year is designing a topiary based garden for Brewin Dolphin and Joe Swift is designing the Homebase Teenage Cancer Trust Garden.  Chelsea is using QR technology (quick response) for the first time this year; the gardens will have a QR code allowing visitors to view further information on each garden.  There will also be a QR code garden featuring a large QR created with clipped topiary planted in a vertical wall.

One of the new categories tipped for big things is Fresh, it challenges designers to come up with inventive and ground breaking designs, without the usual constraints of a show garden, the only limitation is plot size. Tony Heywood and Alison Condie, are the artists in residence for Chelsea 2012, they are creating a Fresh garden named Glamourlands: a Techno-Folly. The garden is an evolving piece first seen at Tatton Flower Show in 2010.  It’s based on an abstract representation of the Dorset coast and it is covered in thousands of brightly coloured jewels.

Tony Heywood installation Tatton Flower Show 2010

Also new this year will be five Artisan Retreats, the small garden huts will be decorated by top designers to show the creative potential for small spaces. The retreats have been designed by VV Rouleaux founder Annabel Lewis, Nikki Tibble of Wild at Heart florist, Orla Kiely interiors and lifestyle designer, Vicki Conran interiors designers and textile artist Kaffe Fassett.

Chelsea also showcases the best of British floral design, hosting the Young florist of the Year competition and the final of the RHS Florist of the Year.  The Great Pavilion will feature some exciting exhibits including a life size Formula One car made from topiary, a Monet inspired floral exhibit and Fencing displays by the British Olympic Fencing Team.

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