Chelsea was as big, grand and inspiring as I was hoping it would be. One of the things I was really struck by was just how seriously this event is taken in the UK. The large grounds of the show were teeming with BBC camera crews doing spotlights on gardens, shows with celebrities (OK, “celebrities” in the gardening world) and interviewing visitors. Every other conversation I overheard was about how that garden looked smaller on TV, or what was said about this garden on a show. And the Chelsea buzz is not just at the show – even as we were visiting gardens outside of London for the long weekend, references to Chelsea were popping up everywhere. Overall, I was impressed with how prominent the show is and the exposure it gets.
Now to the show itself – I could probably do about fifty blogs on it. We arrived there 5 minutes after opening (although we’d planned to be there earlier!), and I couldn’t believe how many people were already there. For a standard show, it would be considered full. We immediately ran over to the “Main Avenue” where the large show gardens are, so we could have a peak without 10 people in front of us. The show gardens were really impressive. It’s remarkable how established and fully mature they can look after only being set in place in the last two weeks. This ain’t no Canada Blooms – no pots of the same hydrangeas or forced bulbs in every garden, poorly hidden in mulch. Plants included everything you can possibly think of, from gigantic trees to wildflower meadows, all perfectly planted with not a hint of artificiality. And of course the water features, hardscaping and other features were all very impressive. Granted, the timing of the show in late May makes this much easier. The gardens also benefit from a backdrop of beautiful, huge trees on the Chelsea Hospital grounds rather than a bleak indoor show hall.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiy79RkFs36AMCrsFTU6mPXHrvSagjtX3-SMMBvWPjxAAOHraxbbgh9vdAdI_yZYWgIf4qIZsnMLIyLh9z6JwMKVxoTRZjpjztauZxE6ZIj9H7xglPIdCZPrUlaCiz3e_zBITeihWMrtafF/s280/Chelsea+Flower+Show+Wetland+Garden+2009.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjQedYvL8Q6P0pjOP_ePIEheORd1Pa02ux1IjugOEWqzNcZ7e_x2Pwb6l1miyqVNv5HyEpCS6aGgJ5v_lPFLGAwFToCHJikaQI_BOhQZnYrFS68CeEgOXmB4ovvzZ1XiOZD5pPOa8a_O71k/s280/Chelsea+Flower+Show+Urban+Garden+2009.jpg)
Other nice gardens were the Daily Telegraph Garden, which won Best in Show and was designed by Swedish landscape architect Ulf Nordfjell.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjOWVB85N56CBOscS0_S9SGE2L-zzZc_J4mPM7MI1_b27NczKM0L-BZsQ6oCAIaPrcUc3FfN3N0zCUC5x0jAZFu6gcVdVqaf-ytrE_LX1h517M5Kk_g3tvWgCiaEgXWix1MD6OjBeXABcRm/s280/Chelsea+Flower+Show+Telegraph+2009.jpg)
The Laurent-Perrier Garden done by first time Chelsea designer Luciano Giubbilei.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh06kkfuMigm4xI8ctZPkm-AdfGEAHTz4MBFclrj58nqxYEpItji4Q8zHapM49iIsSkcR3vIdevx8-ErACg7rGljWXF-r4Fm7Lw1g-0jgcnpjrgNVbU1GD8MFPirHl_J4vFvExxLd01bYj2/s280/Chelsea+Flower+Show+Laurent+Perrier+2009.jpg)
And the Marshalls "Living Street" garden showing four different front gardens.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjnRujDPOSlYBifl-ekaAH59MULeA8nv4NszXiRlhu0Ls3b-1RMZHd-jJfVu4EjAKD-ZwAatG1Fow0d6SWsPqi6YsszMH5wUMh4AyCtDDtN1WVZgEDihRpK1NjhD46fDvzRiPW0ZtpcTwyY/s280/Chelsea+Flower+Show+Marshall+Garden+2009.jpg)
Well, that was a long post and it only takes us through the large show gardens! I'll be back with more from Chelsea soon!
amazing! look forward to more!
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