Weeds grow at London's Chelsea Flower Show

Gardeners have traditionally viewed weeds as a menace to be eradicated

LONDON - Nettles, dandelions, brambles: weeds -- once considered a scourge -- are taking pride of place at London's Chelsea Flower Show as gardeners concern themselves more than ever with biodiversity and sustainable development.

Around 145,000 visitors, including King Charles III and Queen Camilla, are expected to attend the five-day annual horticultural extravaganza starting on Tuesday, one of the most popular of its kind worldwide.

Visitors can enjoy a selection of specially planted gardens showcasing themes and trends.

In 2022, the gold medal went to a garden celebrating rewilding after the reintroduction of beavers to the southwestern England.

This year, no less than one-third of the 12 main gardens in competition feature weeds such as nettles, knapweed, dandelions, chickweed or buttercups that generations of gardeners have spent their lives rooting out.

Designer Cleve West includes 19 weed species in his creation for the Chelsea Flower Show
AFP | Ben Stansall

Six-time Chelsea Flower Show gold-medal landscape designer Cleve West has managed to include 19 weed species in his garden for the Centrepoint Association.

West said the garden, constructed around the dilapidated remains of a 19th-century house, was for him the perfect metaphor for the young homeless people the charity cares for, who shouldn't be written off.

"Weeds play a very significant part in repairing land. When land has been disturbed, weeds are the first things that go. They are pioneer plants that go in and repair the soil," he told AFP.

Using weeds fits into the greater emphasis this year on rewilding and sustainability
AFP | Ben Stansall

"They sort of have a microbial activity in the soil that helps make soils healthy, fertile and it provides food for early pollinators -- even homes for some invertebrates," he said.

"So they play a very important part in biodiversity."

This is the first time he has planted weeds in a competition garden.

He says he is fascinated by all "the life forms they support" and urges gardeners to make space for them if possible to discover the "intricacies involved in how plants grow together".

The RHS hopes including weeds will dispel myths about gardening being only for traditionalists
AFP | Ben Stansall

The concept of celebrating weeds, however, is not without its critics at a show famed for the creativity and meticulousness of its beautiful gardens.

"The war against traditional gardens is about to go nuclear," is how conservative newspaper The Daily Telegraph summed up the latest weed-friendly trend.

Celebrity gardener Alan Titchmarsh told Country Life magazine the aim of the Royal Horticultural Society's flagship show was to reward gardening excellence.

This was being "obscured", he said, by a need to show gardeners were not "dyed-in-the-wool traditionalists" but "vibrant folk with a finger on the current environmentalist pulse", he said.

Even so, weeds have not yet succeeded at complete domination.

The 12 main gardens in competition -- out of a total of 36 -- use an average of 3,000 different plants. The smallest, dedicated to balconies and potted plants, has around a hundred.

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