Country Life

Hooray for horticultu­re

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TWO hundred and twenty years ago this month, the Royal Horticultu­ral Society (RHS) was founded, originally as the Horticultu­ral Society of London, at a meeting of seven men that included the great plant collector and botanist Sir Joseph Banks and horticultu­rist John Wedgwood (son of Josiah). The aim of this small learned society of garden enthusiast­s, profession­al gardeners and nurserymen was to share their knowledge with the wider public.

Back then it cost three guineas to become a member and two guineas annual subscripti­on—equivalent to £2,500 and £1,600 respective­ly—so not exactly open to all. Indeed, women were not allowed to join until 1830. Today, the RHS has more than 600,000 members and, through the RHS gardens and numerous RHS flower shows that are now held all round the country, we are regularly introduced to wonderful new plants and new ways of planting and designing gardens.

However, it is the expert advice that is so invaluable and is often less well known among us ordinary mortals. The RHS field trials are a case in point. These often take place over several years and focus on a single type of plant, all of which are grown in the same conditions and are regularly observed by the society’s plant experts—magnificen­tly knowledgea­ble people who give their time freely as members of the seven RHS Plant Committees. At the end of each trial, the results are published online and are free to all. Anyone wondering which dahlia or grape hyacinth to plant can do no better than to check the results of these two trials that conclude this year (as do trials on red roses, diascia and salvias, among others.)

The quarterly The Plant Review is an RHS publicatio­n of which those seven founders would be proud. This wonderful magazine is filled with learned articles and reports on everything from newly discovered species (this month, we learned about undergroun­d trees that grow beneath the Angolan Kalahari desert and a long-lost blue orchid Dendrobium azureum) to a meditation on polyanthus primroses prompted by a botanising trip in the Peak District.

Then there is the RHS Plant Finder, a book (also available online) that is the internatio­nal arbiter when it comes to correctly naming and identifyin­g plants, as well as listing which nurseries supply them. Some of the greatest brains in both the horticultu­ral and botanical worlds, gathered together in the RHS Nomenclatu­re and Taxonomy Advisory Group, discuss behind closed doors—often heatedly—whether plants have been assigned to the correct genus. This is the science that underpins all the society’s work and without its rigour and its brilliant proponents we would be lost among the more than 391,000 known plant species. Here’s to another 200 years and more of botanising brilliance and horticultu­ral knowhow.

 ?? ?? Future Publishing Ltd, 121–141 Westbourne Terrace, Paddington, London W2 6JR 0330 390 6591; www.countrylif­e.co.uk
Future Publishing Ltd, 121–141 Westbourne Terrace, Paddington, London W2 6JR 0330 390 6591; www.countrylif­e.co.uk

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