Top UK flower show bursts into bloom

More than 150,000 people are expected to visit the RHS’s annual popular Chelsea Flower Show in the next 5 days, with 30 gardens competing for coveted awards
Visitors view the ‘Giant Washing Machine’ in the exhibit from ELKA Textiles and Sparsholt College at the 2026 RHS Chelsea Flower Show in London. Photos: AFP

From gardens to inspire younger generations, to havens of peace and sanctuary, to a hothouse space designed to stir desire, the UK’s top flower show is flourishing.

“We’ve never needed the joy of gardening, the power of plants for our planet or the peace of simply sitting in a garden, more,” said Clare Matterson, director of the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS), in a statement.

Over five days from today, more than 150,000 people are expected to visit the RHS’s annual popular Chelsea Flower Show with 30 gardens competing for coveted awards.

Designer James Whiting’s exhibit ‘Aphrodite’s Hothouse’.

Shaking up the normally genteel world of gardening, Aphrodite’s Hothouse is described on the RHS website as “the ultimate pleasure garden… lush, fragrant and just a little bit naughty”.

It’s “a theatrical display” of lust and love, designer James Whiting said.

With pendulous or heart-shaped flowers and suggestive, sculptural blooms, as well some discreet sex toys, the indoor garden has stirred some controversy.

Whiting dismissed it though, saying “people are excited to see something a bit fresh… and to see the RHS opening the doors to more modern topics”.

“Flowers are all about sex. So why not bring that to the Chelsea Flower Show?” he asked, pointing to “a new wave of gardeners” exhibiting at the show.

A visitor amid rose bushes from Peter Beales’s roses exhibit.

‘Hope, regeneration’

Elsewhere, fallen trees have been carved into a giant sculpture of a sleeping Gaia, or Mother Nature in Greek mythology, emphasising the natural world’s power to protect.

“The garden aims to bring to you the potential and the joy in the ordinary,” said Sarah Eberle, designer of the Garden on the Edge from the Campaign for Protection of Rural England.

After the show, the whole garden including Gaia will be moved to be a communal park for a housing estate in northern Sheffield.

Britain’s King Charles III talkingwith designer Sarah Eberle in The Campaign to Protect Rural England’s ‘On the Edge’ garden.

Also with an eye on sustainability, the Bring Me Sunshine garden has been designed to become part of the UK’s second Eden Project, which is set to open in 2028 in northwestern Morecambe.

It is surrounded by a wall made from shell-based waste products − clams, mussels and cockles, and limestone from the coast − a recycled alternative to concrete.

The garden is filled with edible plants, such as samphire, making its first appearance at the show, sea kale, and sea buckthorn − all plants from the Morecambe Bay coast.

An “important way to connect with nature is using food as that gateway”, said one of the designers and keen forager, Harry Holding.

The original Eden Project has pumped £6.8 billion into the local economy in the 25 years since a clay pit in southwestern Cornwall was transformed into stunning gardens.

CEO of Eden Project Andy Jasper posing in the ‘Bring Me Sunshine Garden’.

It draws about a million visitors annually, and the aim is to bring the same benefits to the impoverished Morecambe, providing jobs and training to young people.

This is a story about “hope and regeneration”, co-designer Alex Michaelis said.

Further along is the Children’s Society garden, a peaceful, informal space for teenagers.

“It’s a garden of safety, it’s a garden of calm, of protection,” said designer Patrick Clarke, describing entering the denser part as moving “into the hug of the garden” allowing the “always-on generation” to reflect and slow down.

He has included smaller plants to show resilience, “little jewels, that just need that little bit of love, that little bit of care that we all need”.

‘Be curious’

Set on the banks of the River Thames, the Royal Chelsea Hospital has hosted the show since 1913. So popular has it grown that tickets are all sold out.

This year, for only the second time in the show’s 113-year history, gnomes − those whimsical, some say kitschy, ornaments − have been allowed back onto the showgrounds.

Celebrities including actor Cate Blanchett and guitarist Brian May have painted the cheeky characters to be auctioned off for charity.

King Charles III, who visited the show with Queen Camilla on Monday, also has a garden featured.

Painted gnomes featuring the names of David Beckham, King Charles III, garden designer Frances Tophill and Alan Titchmarsh.

The RHS and The King’s Foundation Curious Garden “celebrates the rich diversity of plants and their impact on our lives”, the show’s website says.

The king’s favourite flower is said to be the majestic delphinium.

Designer and TV presenter Frances Tophill and her team tracked down what is thought to be the rarest delphinium in the world, the cornflower blue Delphinium elatum “Alice Artindale”.

“In my experience, gardening is all about being curious,” said footballing legend David Beckham, who co-created the king’s garden, on the RHS website.

Visitors view the Acacia Studios exhibit.
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