In the new marquees sixty four Gold Medals were awarded covering the full range from International exhibits like Craig House Cacti from California and Kings Park from Perth Western Australia to small nurseries like Glenedd Violets for their African Violets and Hampshire Carnivorous Plants.
The Gold Medals seemed to come in pairs this year for the different types of exhibits. Two rose nurseries won Golds, David Austin Roses, who introduced six new varieties of their 'new' old-fashioned roses and Mattocks Roses featuring a wide range of their County Series of ground cover varieties. Two exhibits in the cottage garden style again did well. Glebe Cottage Plants, showing hardy perennials old and new, and Hardys Cottage Garden Plants with their four exquisite borders surrounding wooden chess board both won Golds.
Both sweet pea exhibits from Diane Sewell and Dave Matthewman won Golds and two hosta exhibits from Goldbrook Plants and Park Green Nurseries won Golds; the two small bulb specialists, Avon Bulbs and Broadleigh Gardens, two herb exhibits from Jekka's Herb Farm and Cheshire Herbs, and the two nurseries specialising in carnivorous plants, Hampshire Carnivorous Plants and South West Carnivorous Plants, also won Golds.
Seven specialist societies won Gold Medals. The British Mycological Society's exhibit explaining the difference between edible and poisonous fungi, the bonsai exhibit from the Federation of British Bonsai Societies and the National Chrysanthemum Society all won Golds. The Hardy Plant Society showed plants from the reigns of the two Queen Elizabeths, Orchid Society of Great Britain showed the wide range of orchids which can be grown by amateurs - both Golds.
Two scientific stands won the top accolade. The exhibit from Sparsholt College in Hampshire outlined how mathematics influences nature and the Oxford Botanic Garden explained why plants smell. |
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Jekka McVicar of Jekka's Herbs won yet another Gold Medal for her meticulously planted herb stand in the Floral Marquee.
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Brinsbury College's outdoor exhibit was lauded as the Best Courtyard Garden.
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