THE MOST IMAGINATIVE GARDEN AT THIS YEAR'S CHELSEA FLOWER SHOW, DESIGNED ON A SHOESTRING, CELEBRATED COLOUR AND TEXTURE, EVANESCENT ARCHITECTURE AND ANGLO-FRENCH COOPERATION.The Chelsea Flower Show The Chelsea Flower Show is a garden show held each year on five days in May by the Royal Horticultural Society in the grounds of the Royal Hospital Chelsea in Chelsea, London, England. It is the most famous such show in the United Kingdom, and part of London's summer social season. is one of London's most famous annual events. Show gardens intended to demonstrate the creativity and skill of garden designers have become a larger part of the show getting more lavish and costly by the year, but not necessarily more inventive. They are not always easy to see. The frontages are too narrow and the plots are often too deep. And whereas television cameras are allowed free access to roam and probe, and even hover overhead, the wretched spectators must put up with a fixed and often restricted viewpoint. So it was intelligent of the designers of this Gold Medal gold medal traditional first prize. [Western Cult: Misc.] See : Prize winning garden (landscape architect, Ryl Nowell, collaborating with the architects Christopher Proctor and Fernando Rihl) to treat their plot like a steeply raked stage set. Spectators could not only see everything from the stalls, as it were, but the more intrepid among them could even wander across the stage itself. The 12m x 12m plot tapered ta·per n. 1. A small or very slender candle. 2. A long wax-coated wick used to light candles or gas lamps. 3. A source of feeble light. 4. a. towards the rear and was made up of a series of terraces, subdivided into rhomboid rhomboid /rhom·boid/ (rom´boid) [Gr. rhombos rhomb +-oid ] having a shape similar to a rectangle that has been skewed to one side so that the angles are oblique. shaped beds. Down the middle ran a stream, representing the English Channel English Channel, Fr. La Manche [the sleeve], arm of the Atlantic Ocean, c.350 (560 km) long, between France and Great Britain. It is 112 mi (180 km) wide at its west entrance, between Land's End, England, and Ushant, France. Its greatest width, c. and across the stream lay a steel mesh bridge, symbolizing sym·bol·ize v. sym·bol·ized, sym·bol·iz·ing, sym·bol·iz·es v.tr. 1. To serve as a symbol of: Anglo-French collaboration. At each side of the bridge stood two glass kiosks in which you could shelter from the almost incessant rain and enjoy the textures and colours of species cabbages unexpectedly allied with alliums, irises, lavenders and exotic grasses. Planting by Rhyl Nowell and her French opposite number, Baroness Laurence de Bosmelet, evoked the spirit of their respective gardens: the Cabbages and Kings garden in Sussex, and the Chateau de Bosmelet's kitchen garden in Normandy which specializes in coloured cabbages. |
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