RHS Chelsea 2024 – or the RHS Chelsea Flower Show, to give its full name – is the most prestigious flower show in the world.
Sponsored by the Newt in Somerset, it’s the equivalent of Paris Fashion Week for the horticultural industry.
Of course, as with fashion, not everything you see will transfer to your own garden. The flower borders, for example, are fantasy. Enjoy them!
(Although this year, there are remarkably few ‘flower borders’, as you’ll see from this post.)
But many of the garden design ideas and details transfer brilliantly to real gardens, especially as show gardens are designed in such a limited space.
So here are the best ideas from RHS Chelsea 2024 for your garden.
Whether you want to update a corner, transform the whole garden or just want to add a little top designer stardust to your space, this is where to start.
Blur your boundaries – more relaxed paths and pavers
Many of the RHS Chelsea gardens blurred the boundaries between planting and paths. Planting spilled over into gravel.
It’s a more relaxed look, and more wildlife friendly because it usually means more planting.
Instead of having borders, plants are allowed to colonise any areas you’re not using for something else.
Embrace the shade – ‘woodland edge’ planting at RHS Chelsea 2024
Every garden has more than half of its area in shade, but shade has always been treated as a second-best by the gardening world. No longer! Several gardens at RHS Chelsea 2024 majored on ‘woodland edge’ planting.
Add pops of colour with accessories or paint
Foliage-based gardens are usually very green, and many shade loving flowers are white.
So if you’re a colour lover, then add pops of colour with cushions, furniture or fencing.
Upcycle and re-use! RHS Chelsea 2024 cuts waste!
RHS Chelsea 2024 wants to reinforce the idea that we should try to re-use things wherever we can. I can remember the galvanised steel hot and cold water tanks from my parents’ attic. They looked exactly like the water tank water feature on Naomi Slade and Ed Barsley’s Flood Re garden. Oh, why did we ever throw those tanks out?
Use vertical space in a sculptural way
If you draw the eye upwards in a small garden, then the garden seems bigger. And pillars, arches and pergolas can be focal points or opportunities for climbers.
What emerges clearly from RHS Chelsea 2024 is that these arches, pillars and pergolas are now garden art.
They can still be used for growing plants and dividing up the space, but think carefully about what style you want when choosing them. It’s no longer just a choice between metal, brick or wood!
Seating goes sculptural too
One of the best ideas people with small gardens can take away from RHS Chelsea 2024 is that seating can save space if it’s built in.
And by choosing interesting materials and shapes, your seating becomes an integral part of the design of your garden.
Decking and grid surfaces
Decking had a huge wave of popularity in the early part of the 21st century and became over-used. Now decking is back, floating slightly above the ground to allow worms, micro-organisms and other living things to survive under it. It’s also being used a raised walkway, so that gardens can flood underneath.
Metal grids are also being used in a similar way.
Moss and mushrooms!
Think before you clear away moss and funghi. It’s now more widely recognised that very few funghi are damaging to the garden. And both moss and funghi have an important role to play in the environment. You don’t want to slip on a mossy path, so clear moss away where you have to, but otherwise leave both.
I hope you enjoy visiting RHS Chelsea 2024 if you’re going in person. And next comes RHS Hampton Court Palace Garden Festival (2nd-7th July).
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