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Gardening as art goes on show at famous UK festival

(China Daily) Updated: 2017-05-24 07:34

LONDON - From the world's hottest chili to a garden inspired by music, Britons are celebrating their love for gardening this week at the Chelsea Flower Show, one of the world's biggest horticultural festivals.

With the champagne already flowing at the week-long show where more than 165,000 visitors are expected, Queen Elizabeth II herself toured some of the hundreds of exhibitors on Monday.

And the Royal Horticultural Society denied rumors that Brexit was throwing a spanner in the works by putting off some of the festival's sponsors.

"There are only three show gardens less than last year but we have novelties like the two Feel Good gardens, which celebrate the five senses," RHS spokeswoman Alice McDermott said.

Visitors have to pay between 63 and 80 pounds ($82 and $104) to enter the show, set in the exclusive surroundings of the grounds of the 17th century Royal Hospital Chelsea.

For anyone who believes that plants are just plants and gardens are purely decorative, the Chelsea Flower Show offers a magnificent rebuttal.

The far from ordinary gardens include some to fight against environmental threats, or improve physical and mental health, or inspire poets and musicians.

Garden designer Chris Beardshaw said his exhibit was inspired by Bach and Mozart.

"I'm immersing myself in the music... Trying to picture how these music elements fit," he said.

"It's always a challenge to be in the show, you have to be ready for a precise day."

At a garden nearby, cabbages and salads are arranged in neat rows to "recreate the feeling when you stand too close to a speaker stack at a concert - the sensation of music reverberating through your whole body," said its designer James Alexander Sinclair.

There is no sign of garden gnomes or other decorations considered an affront to good taste by the garden connoisseurs. Instead, a sculptor can be found "balancing stones" for a feature.

The only concessions to common garden decorations are giant animals made out of artificial grass or the graffiti in a space entitled "Greening gray Britain".

"Gardens and plants are no longer an optional and decorative nice-to-have. They're essential," said the urban garden's designer Nigel Dunnett.

"With pollution levels dangerously high in cities and flash-flooding devastating areas of the country, we need to all embrace the fact that plants help mitigate against some of the biggest environmental threats facing us today."

The show, which is open until Saturday, reserved a few surprises even for its participants.

While growing a chili pepper for the show, horticulturalist Bob Price said he had accidentally created the strongest specimen in the world.

The "Dragon's Breath" scores 2.4 million on the Scoville scale - a measure of the fieriness of chili peppers - in what Price hopes will become a new Guinness world record.

Agence France - Presse

 Gardening as art goes on show at famous UK festival

A model wears a floral headdress at the Royal Horticultural Society's Chelsea Flower Show in London during the opening of the annual event on Monday. Dylan Martinez / Reuters

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