Amateur Gardening – 21 May 2019

(John Hannent) #1

26 AMATEURGARDENING 11 MAY 2019


M

Yfirstexperienceof RHS
ChelseaFlowerShowwas
asan18-year-oldstudentin
theearly1990s.Alongwith
myfellowstudents,I createda displayin
theGreatPavilionforSparsholtCollege
in Hampshire.Beingontheshowground
duringthebuild-upanddismantlingin
thedarkwasanexperiencelikeno
other,andthiswasthestartof a
passionateloveaffairwiththemost
impressiveshowin theworld.
SincemyfirstinvolvementatRHS
Chelsea,I’veattendednearlyevery
yearsince.Theshowis soalivewith
ideasthatformeit’sthegardening
equivalenttobeingin WillyWonka’s
ChocolateFactory.I havealsobeen
oneoftheluckyoneswhohasattended
ona regularbasisontheMondayPress
Day,butneverfora momentdidI think
thatI wouldbecomea judge.
Then,fiveyearsago,I was
approachedbytheRHSforsucha role.
However,it wasn’tuntillastyearthatI
wasgiventheofficialstatusofa judge.
OverthepastfewyearsI havebeen
ontrainingdaysandshadowedvery
experiencedjudges.There’sa lotto
learnandtheRHSneedstobesureyou
haveallthequalities they require for this
seriousrole.
Judgesaretrainedfora specific
judging role, and if you are trained as a

Gardenjudgeyouwillbegiveneitherthe
ArtisangardensortheShowGardens
to judge– youdon’tgetto choose.For
example,judgesfortheGreatPavilion,
newproductof theyearandtrade stands
arecompletelyseparate.
Thewealthofexperienceand
knowledgewithinthejudgingteam
is incredible.I’veworkedwithworld-
renowneddesigners,plantsmen,
landscapersandgardeners.Within
eachteamthere’sanexpertin every
field.Authoritiesin planthealth,design,
constructionandplantingarealways
included in a judging team.

Two-dayprocess
TheRHSjudgingteamdecideswhether
youaretobeanassessingjudge,a
judgeora moderatorata show.There
arethreestagestothejudgingprocess.
Thefirstinvolvestheassessingjudges
ontheSaturdaybeforeRHSChelsea.
Theyheara two-minutepresentation
fromthedesignerandthentheteamof
threelookoverthegarden,andusethe
criteriaandthebrieftocomeupwith a
scoreandsuggestedmedal.
Thesecondstageinvolvesfour
judgesandthesamethreeassessors
andtakesplaceontheSunday.Theywill
alsobejoinedbya moderator.Gardens
canlosemarksif theypromisetodeliver
one thing in the brief, which will have

beensubmittedwellin advanceofthe
show,butfailtobringthatpromiseto
thecompletedgarden.Thismayexplain
whya gardenthatlooksincredibletothe
publicmaynotreceivea GoldMedal.For
example,if a designerhasplannedto
havea silverbirchtree,butchanges it to
a malus, points are deducted.

Meetingthebrief
Gardenswillalsolosemarksif the
constructionis poor,andnotallaspects
ofconstructionareeasytoseeasa
visitor.Thebriefincludesa description
ofthegarden,thepurposeofthe
garden,thefunctionofthegarden,
andkeyplantsandfeatures.
Aswellasmeetingthebrief,there
area numberofothercriteriaforwhich
thejudgesgivemarks.Thecriteriaare:
ambition– howoriginalis thedesign,
andis theretheatre,flair,atmosphere
andimpact?Overallimpression– does
thegardenworkasa wholeandhow
fineis thefinishandattentiontodetail?
Design– doesthegardenworkforits
supposedpurpose?Construction– how
goodis thequalityofthebuilt?Planting


  • colour,impact,composition,health
    andwouldtheplantsliveandsurvive
    together?Thejudgesgivethefollowing
    marks:excellent(4 points),verygood
    (3 points),good(2points),poor (1 point),
    unsatisfactory (0 points).


Judgesatthe 2014 RHSChelseaFlowerShowdiscussing
TheTelegraph’scontemporaryItaliangarden, which
was eventually awarded a Gold Medal

WithRHSChelseaFlowerShowfastapproaching,judgeTamsinWesthorpe
explains what’s involved in the very thorough judging process of the Gardens

Here comes the judge...

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