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Showing posts with label Peter Dowle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Dowle. Show all posts

Thursday, 18 May 2023

A day at the RHS Malvern Show 2023 and why you should visit next year



 It's that time of year when I feel rather giddy. After the long dark days of winter, and let's face it, quite a miserable spring so far, May and the months ahead are full of promise, opportunities, and excitement as the annual round of major garden fairs, festivals and open gardens begin. Each event has its own charm, depending on what time of the year it is held and where.

Going to my first show of the season last week was an absolute delight. There’s something about RHS Malvern Spring Festival that gladdens my heart.

Firstly, the setting is sublime, with the glorious Malvern Hills providing a stunning backdrop and the sheer size of the immaculate Three Counties Showground means there is plenty of space to wander around and more importantly with lots of seating to relax.



The Floral Marquee has a dominating position near the entrance, and you can see visitors debating whether to go in there first to see the 50 nurseries which are exhibiting in the 190 metre long marquee or plough on ahead to see the show gardens.

As it was early morning I marched resolutely onwards before the crowds came, to get a good look at the five show gardens as well as the feature gardens.

It was easy to see why the Bee Positive, Bee Kind , Bee Aware garden was awarded a gold medal by the judges.


Designed by Rock Ford and Katie Gentle for global charity, Bees for Development, the beehives take centre stage, as all around the planting is designed to attract and feed bees with vegetables, herbs and perennial flowers. I particularly liked the living roof of the kitchen,and the area below. In fact, I wanted to leap over the ropes and settle there for an hour, listening to the bees and admiring the layout of the garden. So many good ideas to take home here... 

The Greener Gloucestershire NHS Garden designed by Laura Ashton Phillips is also full of plants to attract wildlife but has been created as a calming environment for patients at the Gloucester Royal Hospital. A well deserved Silver Medal for Laura ….




The pretty, soothing palette of colours and a running stream appeal to the senses, there are wide pathways so the garden is completely accessible. It's an inviting space to connect with nature after being in the sterile world of a hospital, something which has been proven to lower stress levels and improve patient recovery rates.

Meanwhile, Jamie Langlands stole the show with his design for The Wildlife Trusts' "Wilder Spaces Garden” 

It features a pond, a creek, native wildflowers and a wide variety of habitats for wildlife and encouraging diversity. Mind you, it's also an inspiring and restful garden for humans...and this human loved it.

So did the judges here at RHS Malvern.  They awarded this garden a Gold Medal,, Best in  Show and the Best Construction for a garden .

I was there when the judges came over and presented Jamie and his team with the awards. After the smiles for the photographers, the guys had the longest of group hugs and the biggest grins on their faces.



Speaking briefly with Jamie afterwards, he couldn't contain his delight. "It's amazing. This is the type of garden that's more me, and I'm thrilled for my contractors who worked so hard in quite tough conditions. It's great that they have been given this award." 

A large, 25 metre dome which dominated the Show Gardens area was certainly a talking point. Going inside Leaf Tropicana was quite a revelation, leaving an oh so quintessentially English country festival and finding yourself in a tropical wonderland of heat, humidity and lush greenery.


The vision, the scale of the planting (3,000 plants), the height of the trees and being confronted by a huge waterfall  are breathtakingly successful. There's even a little bar to sit at and have a drink.

Chatting with designer Peter Dowle, who runs Leaf Creative, a plant nursery and garden design service in Gloucestershire,  I was surprised how relaxed he was after a build which took 14 men 12 days to construct.“So what happens to all these plants after the show” I asked Peter. Apparently every plant is recycled. Many are hired out for events and he pointed out one huge plant which has been on display 5 times at different events. 

So, these were the four gardens I very much enjoyed t, but every single garden here had  something to admire or an idea to squirrel away for future use.

Of course it's not just the gardens that visitors come to see at RHS Malvern. This year there seemed to be an increasing amount of talks and demonstrations by top florists,  garden experts and designers, cooks plus familiar faces from the telly, such as James Alexander Sinclair, Frances Tophill, Alan Titchmarsh, Adam Frost,,Mark Diacono, Greg Wallace et al.

It's lovely to take a pause for half an hour and listen to knowledgeable and amiable speakers, and they were very popular with visitors.

The retail offer at this spring festival is top notch too. Everything from clothes to garden antiques, thousands of plants in perfect condition, garden seating  parasols, plant pots , tools etc which you never knew you never needed were tempting so many. Artisan and local food and drinks  producers were selling well too indoors and with something new to taste or take home. 



As Thursday drew to a close, it was time to go and at last visit the Floral Marquee on the way out. With the crowds thinning out, there was space to see everything that the plant nurseries had to offer and time to talk to experts in their field of speciality. As suspected, I couldn't resist the lure of seeing plants at their peak and a tray of carnations and three stunning pots of tulips soon found themselves in the boot of my car.

As I made my way home happily, I realised two things: what an entertaining and motivational day it had been, and also that RHS Malvern has become my favourite festival.

RHS Malvern is being held next year from 9 - 12 May 2024.

Friday, 16 June 2017

Press Day at Gardeners' World Live


This year's BBC Gardeners' World Live at the NEC near Birmingham is a milestone - the 25th year of the show. It's also just happens to be the best one I've been to here.

I know that's quite a statement, but for me, the show which celebrates 50 years of BBC Gardeners' World on our television screens, is a delightful celebration of our British gardens through the last half a century.

Also this year, you won't be able to miss some of our best loved television gardeners , they're here every day on stage at the BBC Gardeners'World Live Theatre, in the potting shed, and at the Demo bench in the Floral Marquee. Carol Klein, Monty Don, Alan Titchmarsh, Joe Swift, Adam Frost , Toby Buckland, Uncle Tom Cobley and all will be around the show. You'll be tripping over them...we were on Press Day !

But what about the actual gardens? Well, there are some absolute delights and the show garden which made me smile and took me straight back to my childhood was the Nostalgia Garden.



This was a loving recreation of a garage, with a village shop and  nursery attached from the 1960s and 70s.,. The attention to period detail was superb


Gardening photographer Julia Stanley and I were admiring the hump back bridge over a stream in the foreground....and there was even an orange flymo left in the long grass, which was a clever touch which made us giggle. No wonder this garden designed by Paul Stone won a gold medal.


The garden which caught my heart though was Wyevale Garden Centres: Romance in the ruins. Partly broken brick walls, pergolas wreathed in fragrant roses, this was a wistful, romantic notion of the faded grandeur of castle ruins.


The subtle , muted colours, the layout, all were so evocative of what was and what is. There's so many castle ruins still in our country, and this was a homage to them all I feel. A stunning design by Claudia de Yong who oh so rightly won the award for Best Show Garden.


I spoke to her briefly while she sat on the grass opposite about the roses she chose....the white Desdemona, Albertine , Wedgewood and the Generous Gardener rose which is one of the most highly scented..

I wish I could have taken more photographs and spent more time in this garden, but there was so much filming going on in there, I didn't get a chance. Unlike radio, where I can slip in and do a fairly quick interview, telly has different demands -and they're very time consuming.

Close by was the Anniversary Garden ;A brief history of Modern Gardens . This has been designed by Professor David Stevens - he's the one who's won oodles of gold medals and four best in shows, and again he's got another gold medal.

The garden was divided into five small sections, each one representing a decade from the 1960's to the present day..

The  first one reminded me of my grandfather's garden at the back of his Victorian terraced house , the line post cutting the garden into two, with the shed, and bedding plants. Ooh they loved their bedding plants back then didn't they?  Neatness, precision and crazy paving ruled.


Demonstrating that the vintage lawn mower worked ( I have virtually the same model in the shed next to our piggery) was Peter Dowle from Howle Hill Nursery who's done well this year after getting Best in Show at Malvern earlier this year.


No wonder he looked rather happy as he relaxed





I wandered up along APL Avenue as it's called...where members of the Association of Professional Landscapers showcase their work.

I did like Big Fish landscapes "Wetland Plants- the idea of Wilderness Garden".

All so often a wilderness garden can look ....well, wild and rampant. Here, this wilderness garden is a contemporary garden which would work anywhere yet would still encourage biodiversity.

 


 
 



Here you can see the quote from Edward Abbey the American writer who was a passionate advocate of environmental issues who died in 1989.

Further along, the Pro Gardens "Clic Sargent "Garden was awarded a silver gilt medal. Straight out of a children's picture book, this is a place to definitely be a child again. Something that children with cancer don't get the chance to be ...they're too busy trying to survive and be brave.






A very popular , and award winning gold garden was Living Gardens "It's not just about the beard" .

It got my vote for the most intriguing titled garden in the first place! Now, you can't ignore Peter Cowell and Monty Richardson who are Living Designs. Both with bushy beards and braces, you couldn't miss them on Press day..


And the irresistible aroma of barbecued jerk chicken led people by their noses to their garden  which uses reclaimed construction materials and featured a bar as well as the barbecue. A hipster garden for sure, but one which really worked as a garden to relax and entertain in.



I really liked this living wall of thymes ..so tactile, and as I brushed past the wall, they released their lovely tangy Mediterranean fragrance.
 
 

But BBC Gardeners'World Live isn't just about show gardeners, there's so many accessible displays here with new, quirky, simple ideas which work so well.. The Beautiful borders category for instance,
 the Meal in a wheelbarrow feature for instance and there's so many plants to buy.

Let's not forget the Floral Marquee either.On Press Day, many of the stands were still being built, plus there was still so much titivating to do to make each plant was perfect....



Judging didn't place until yesterday, but I'm not surprised that Barnsdale Gardens won a gold for their wonderful display with a bust of the legendary and much loved Geoff Hamilton at its centre. What an inspirational gardener he was to thousands of viewers over the years on Gardeners' World.

My favourite stand in the Floral marquee though was this one from W.S.Warmenhoven. It stood out for so many reasons...the stark simplicity, the oh so precisely placed alliums, the plants at their peak of desirability...I loved it. Unfortunately when I was there , there was no one to talk to on the stand....I had so many questions....






But a five o clock, we all gathered outside for a photo...not of the press you understand, but a photocall of all the Gardeners' World presenters.

It was herding fish trying to get them all together.....and even when they were just about posing perfectly, everyone had to wait while Carol Klein adjusted her bra strap which was just peeping out from her dress. Obviously none of the others had a similar problem.



This show has so much to offer..as the weekend is set fair (it's going to a scorcher tomorrow) why not venture along to the NEC and celebrate the last fifty years of gardening here in Britain?