Hampton Court Palace Show – Where to Stay

Ecover RHS Hampton Court Flower Show

Almost exactly this time last year Mum and I were sitting on a train bound for the gorgeously leafy suburbs of Richmond, to help out on what turned out to be the Best in Show garden at The Hampton Court Palace Flower Show. We did a day’s work helping to prepare the plants for the Ecover garden… and I will never look at Lamb’s Ear the same ever again!

Aside from being able to say that I’ve worked on an award winning garden for the Hampton Court Palace Flower Show, we were also able to see all the gardens on Press Day, freshly landscaped and planted in, ready for a few days of exhibition. There were some truly inspirational planting schemes and ideas – plenty of which lent themselves to my sustainable/wildlife-friendly ethos – and I came away revved up to put my own plans into action here at The Smallest Smallholding. If you want to witness bundles of creativity, I would recommend Hampton Court Palace over Chelsea any day – more room, less intense crowding (although it still gets very busy) and a wide variety of areas where you can indulge in all things horticulture, from the traditional to sustainable to the utterly insane and wacky.

Ecover RHS Hampton Court Flower Show

Rich has been pestering me about going back again this year, so we are looking to head down to Richmond again. For us, it’s a fairly easy drive around the M25 (ho ho), or sitting on a train and making a change at Victoria Station in London. Getting around the whole site means that we’d need to get there relatively early and make a day of it. Last year, we were a little pushed for time and couldn’t stop and take in each garden as much as we wanted to… so if you’re planning on going, get yourself there as early as possible! I also feel that we were lulled into a false sense of security, as outside of press day, if you’re driving the traffic can be ludicrously busy. When we left the grounds on Press Day, we saw the traffic for just the evening gala… and all I can say is thank goodness for press passes!

So one other option if you’re thinking of heading down, or already have tickets, is to get there early and book into a hotel. It could transform your whole experience and mean you don’t spend hours queueing for the car park. Trust me, it’s a big consideration.

Holiday Inn London Sutton - Junior Suite

You could try the Holiday Inn London – Sutton, which is also close to Wimbledon (we were on our way home last year when the tennis crowd spilled onto the train, exhilarated after Andy Murray had got through his quarter final match). The hotel is in the heart of Sutton and is just a short taxi or car drive from the grounds of Hampton Court Palace and is ideally situated for other attractions such as Chessington World of Adventures, with good links into central London.

Holiday Inn London Kensington Forum - The Consortia Restaurant

Alternatively, if you’d like to make a few days of it and tag on some London sightseeing after you’ve been around the flower show, there’s also the Holiday Inn Kensington Forum Hotel. Both hotels are bright and airy, with modern leisure facilities, a choice of restaurants and bars to choose from (I can personally recommend, we sometimes eat at our local Holiday Inn near Cambridge for business lunches and catch ups with work friends, and the food is actually really good!) and crucially, staying at either will make the journey to the Hampton Court Palace Flower Show a lot less painful.

You can find out more information about the upcoming Hampton Court Palace Flower Show here… tickets are from £19 for a half day, or £30 for a full day – and well worth every penny. I cannot recommend the show enough and I hope that we will be able to go along again this year and find some more wildlife-friendly and vegetable growing inspiration for The Smallest Smallholding.

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RHS Hampton Court Palace Flower Show – Part One


Eryginum

I was lucky enough to be asked to come down to the build up week for the RHS Hampton Court Palace Flower Show by Lauren at Ecover. Why I was chosen, I have no idea since I know a lot of bloggers out there with knowledge that eclipses mine, but it was an opportunity I didn’t want to miss.

I took along Mum – a gardener by trade, who knows the common and latin name of almost every plant she comes across, and who is a much more attentive and successful veg grower than I – and together we trekked down and across London, through Wimbledon and into the leafy suburbs of South London, Surbiton (home of The Good Life ), and to the Surrey border.

After trekking through the Palace and being told off by an anal security guard for not wearing boots, we finally made it into the Flower show area, where a dozen or more gardens were being built up around us. We were greeted by Matthew Childs – the garden’s designer and an RHS gold medal winner – and the lovely Rosanna, who were in the throes of planting up what looked to be shaping up to be a gorgeous planting scheme.

Ecover RHS Hampton Court Flower Show

From the get-go, Mum was waxing lyrical about Matthew’s design. In our family, we’re a fan of loosely choreographed planting schemes, where flowers mingle and drift into one another, where texture and colour froths and spills. Matthew’s planting scheme has achieved this, but within a structured framework that makes it look tidy but not so deliberate.

The ethos behind the garden is that ‘water is life’, but although the garden design does include water, I think his planting scheme doesn’t necessarily rely on water or aquatic plants. Somehow it echoes the flowing, ethereal, constant change of water, and that’s something that I really want to bring back and apply here, in the borders of my Smallest Smallholding.

After a quick introduction to the other workers and volunteers – including a few of Matthew’s cheery family members – we were set to work. We spent a considerable amount of time sprucing up a large selection of blue grasses, prepping them by removing thatch and dead ends… fiddly work but indicative of the care and attention that goes into creating an RHS show garden. It’s not something I’d do in my own garden at home, but show gardens are like works of art, and I can fully appreciate why there is so much attention to detail. We worked in the summer sun, flanked by a lake and the back of the majestic palace, eventually swapping blue grasses (with an audible sigh of relief from such painstaking work) for the sensory softness of Lamb’s Ear.

Ecover RHS Hampton Court Flower Show

Matthew, Rosanna and the team worked tirelessly through the day, having stayed the previous nights until well after 8pm and 9pm, but I did manage to chat with them at various points in the day. I noted how many bumblebees and butterflies were attracted to the volume of plants we had in the ‘staging area’ behind the garden, and in the garden itself. I explained to Matthew that wildlife gardening and favouring plants for pollinators is part of my gardening ethos, and how I tend to let self-seeded pollinator-friendly plants ‘do their thing’ in the borders. Matthew agreed and said to attract even more, stick to native plants and opt for singles and not doubles (like our single orange blossom… so much more popular with the bees et al than our double in the front garden).

Bees on Nepeta - Cat Mint

Mum really enjoyed herself and I think that being there to see the whole show garden process in action – how Matthew and his team went through decision processes to get the garden design on paper into reality (not to mention the painstaking detail of preparing plants for scrutinisation by the judges) – was very valuable in terms of working out how we can apply our ideas at home. One important thing that I’ve really noted is that to get the bold colours and ‘drifting’ qualities, you really need to buy and plant in bulk.

Mum, Rich and I are back at the Flower Show on Monday for the Press Preview, and Celia from Purple Podded Peas was the lucky winner chosen by Ecover to visit the show next week too. I shall hopefully be crossing paths with Compostwoman on Monday, and it will be really interesting to see the garden in its finished, full glory. And if you’re going along, please take a moment to look at the blue grasses and Lamb’s Ear. I worked very hard on those little beggars 😉