Scottish Daily Mail

CHELSEA’S GOLD MEDAL GRAVEYARD

Ugly overgrown garden is f lower show winner

- By Colin Fernandez and Laura Lambert

ITS own designer admits it is ugly and some observers compared it to a graveyard.

But this austere garden has won a gold medal at this year’s Chelsea Flower Show.

The design, voted Best Show Garden, features overgrown plants around limestone blocks and was based on a disused stoneworks in Malta.

Its creator James Basson said he is ‘fanatical’ about quarries, adding that it is ‘not supposed to be pretty. It is stark and monumental­ly brutal’.

Mr Basson – whose previous designs included a garden called After The Fire featuring plants growing among ash – said he did not expect to win, adding: ‘We always challenge, and you can get bronze for challengin­g people. But the RHS have been very open-minded and are celebratin­g things that are not always perfect.’

One visitor said it looked like a ‘memorial garden’, while David Scully, 55, a former gold-medal winner, said: ‘I like the drama, but perhaps it’s just a bit out of proportion.’

Others were more impressed. RHS member Sharon Wall, 48, from Chobham, Surrey, said: ‘It is stunning. You come every year and everything is a certain way and this has gone way out on a limb. It’s good to see something different.’ Mr Basson, who lives in France with his family, sourced plants from Malta, Spain and Italy including a pistachio nut tree, euphorbia, salsify and red valerian.

The garden was created on behalf of investment firm M&G, the show’s sponsor. This is the first year its design has won Best Show Garden.

 ??  ?? Stark: Stone blocks in the garden at the flower show. Inset: The Duchess of Cambridge visits
Stark: Stone blocks in the garden at the flower show. Inset: The Duchess of Cambridge visits

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