The greatest show on earth

The Chelsea Flower Show for 2020 was an early victim of Coronavirus, leaving a bit of a hole in many peoples’ diaries. The RHS, like lots of organisations, is adapting and going online with a virtual flower show. To whet your appetite I’ve been though all my photos from 13 years of shows to bring you my favourite garden from each year.

2007

This garden designed by Laurie Chetwood and Patrick Collins was a surprise gold medal winner, not least because it featured a giant mechanical flower. Apart from that I thought the planting was delightful, particularly this mix of huge yew topiary and softer perennial planting.

Chelsea Flower Sh0w 2007 Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

If you thought this garden was controversial, Best in Show went to the 600 Days garden based on life on Mars…

2008

This year my favourite did win Best in Show. It’s designed by Tom Stuart-Smith, one of my favourite designers.

Chelsea Flower Show 2008 Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

I think it’s still one of all-time favourite gardens, and lucky Tom got to take these infinity water troughs home.

2009

I’ve picked another Best in Show winner this year as well. This was Swedish designer Ulf Nordfjell’s second garden at Chelsea.

Chelsea Flower Show 2009 Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

I loved the different uses of the same material - big chunks of rough-hewn granite, smooth, honed paving and granite chippings. All juxtaposed with the wild-looking planting. I’ve based at least one planting scheme on a similar palette of plants and I love using silver-grey granite paving.

2010

Oh no, another Tom Stuart-Smith garden. I wouldn’t mind sitting here for the duration of lockdown.

Chelsea Flower Show 2010 Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

Best in Show went to another Chelsea perennial, Andy Sturgeon, for his Cancer Research garden. He was described as a “young turk”, ahhh.

2011

An administrative blip on the photo filing front means I can’t bring you a good-quality photo of my favourite garden in 2011. But let me tell you, it was Cleve West’s Best in Show garden based on an excavation of a Roman ruin. Remember the toppled coloumns, that mustard-coloured wall and the flower of the year, Dianthus carthusianorum? I’m still using that plant.

2012

At last I’ve chosen an Andy Sturgeon design. Cleve West won Best in Show for the second year running but I think it should really have gone to Andy Sturgeon. That’s my theory anyway..

Chelsea Flower Show 2012 Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

The sculpture of rusty circles is fab. Oh to have a design budget to run to that sort of frivolity.

2013

And now for something completely different. It takes an Australian designer, in this case Philip Johnson, to produce an amazing garden of waterfalls and native flora.

Chelsea Flower Show 2013 Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

2013 was the centenary year for the Chelsea Flower Show, and it was notable for some of the spats between a couple of designers and the judges. Some mollification was made by the introduction of a Peoples’ Award, won this year by Chris Beardshaw, and a subsequent increase in the transparency of judging.

2014

My choice this year is a bit of a marmite garden. It did win Best in Show for Luciano Guibbelei but wasn’t universally popular.

Chelsea Flower Show 2014 Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

I think it’s because the garden was relatively minimalist for Chelsea. Also, in another attempt to shake things up a bit the RHS started to encourage more younger designers to enter the show. Hugo Bugg, at 27, became the youngest designer to win a gold medal.

2015

In the last five or six years there has been a big move towards wilder-looking gardens like James Basson’s Provencal garden. Best in Show went to Dan Pearson’s evocation of part of Chatsworth’s trout stream.

Chelsea Flower Show 2015 Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

This trend isn’t universally popular and prompts the question of what is a garden? Is an evocation of a wild landscape a garden design? I’ll leave that one with you…

2016

Bucking the trend in more ways than one was Jo Thompson’s Chelsea Barracks Garden. Best in Show went to Andy Sturgeon’s geology inspired design but Jo’s garden was a refreshing change.

Chelsea Flower Show 2016 Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

Manicured to within an inch of it’s life it was all sleek lines and planting perfection. You could smell the roses from 20 yards away.

2017

My choice here is another James Basson garden, this time an evocation of a Maltese quarry. The research into the native flora was meticulous, and getting and growing the plants required painstaking attention to detail.

Chelsea Flower Show 2017 Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

I love the blocks of stone and wildflowers but again it wasn’t everyone’s cup of tea.

2018

This another year where I think the judges got it wrong. Best in Show went to Chris Beardshaw (finally) but I thought his garden was poorly laid out for visitors to be able to see. My favourite was Sarah Price’s Mediterranean garden.

Chelsea Flower Show 2018 Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

Perhaps it was too similar to James Basson’s garden the previous year, but I thought the planting was fantastic. Unusually for a show garden there were no chairs.

2019

And finally to 2019. Yet again it’s another Andy Sturgeon garden. It was a popular winner of Best In Show but who can forget Mark Gregory’s canal garden, winner of the Peoples’ Choice?

Chelsea Flower Show 2019 Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

It’s going to be interesting to see how the RHS will produce a virtual Chelsea, particularly when it comes to the show gardens. In the absence of the real thing I’ll be checking it out. How about you?