Chattanooga Times Free Press

The greenery has royal roots at Prince Harry’s wedding ceremony

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WINDSOR, England — Even the foliage in the flower arrangemen­ts will have royal roots.

Philippa Craddock, the London florist selected by Meghan Markle and Prince Harry to design the blooms for their wedding ceremony, said Wednesday that ferns and branches of silver birch, English oak and beech from Windsor Great Park will be part of the greenery adorning the scenery at nearby St. George’s Chapel.

An integral part at that, according to Craddock.

“The base is the foliage, that’s where the designs start from, and then the flowers are complement­ary on top of that, but actually it’s very much the foliage and shapes of the branches that will give us the shape of the designs,” she told Britain’s Press Associatio­n.

Windsor Great Park is one of the public open spaces owned by Britain’s monarch. Unsurprisi­ngly, its 4,800 acres have quite the pedigree.

William the Conqueror hunted there in the 11th century when the park was a forest. King Charles II was the one who tamed the land in the late 17th century. Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, the husband she would forever mourn after his death at Windsor Castle, were devoted park patrons.

Harry’s great-grandfathe­r, King George VI, set in place the first of 60 oak trees that were planted in honor of his 1937 coronation. Another row of oaks honors Harry’s grandfathe­r, Prince Philip, who holds the title of park ranger. And another celebrated Queen Elizabeth II’s 80th birthday.

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