Thursday, October 02, 2025

The Chelsea Flower Show exhibit recreated in Stanford

Lynne, her sister Marcelle and our friend Judi Thomas are all members of the Cape Horticultural Society
When we heard that South Africa's gold medal winner at this year's Royal Chelsea Flower show in London
was being recreated by Grootbos in Stanford, tickets were bought, accommodation found (thank you generous friends)
and off we went to the show, taking along our resident photographer John, Lynne's husband

Fifty scarecrows had been made by the residents of Stanford

Arriving at the exhibition hall 

It is difficult to show through photographs how large the exhibit was and how impressive. It was breathtaking
One can imagine the impression the exotic plantings made in London

Nerinas Nerine filifolia nestled among the Heaths Erica Capensis

The stream is made of rooibos tea to get the correct colour it would be in the wild
 Streptocarpus primulifolius or African Primrose in blues, pinks and white covered the fern plated wall
Lynne grew these for many years on a coffee table in her London Flat
and yet cannot get them to grow in Cape Town, their home

In the front Lachenalia interplanted with freesias, heaths and Pink Pelargoniums
At the Chelsea show, a fox would come in the night and drink from the rooibos 'river' and leave his footprints
Yes, feral foxes do live in central London

Carpets of Proteas that many have never seen before, grouped so you could see them better
and interplanted with Cone bushes, leucadendron

The entrance on the other side of the stream and waterfall had Arums and rare mini proteas, as well as clivias

The Proteaceae form a family of flowering plants predominantly distributed in the Southern Hemisphere
The family comprises 83 genera with about 1,660 known species
The display was just mind blowing; huge, almost giant King Proteas Cynaroides, down to mini plants

At each turn, something different to admire

White centres, dark centres and no visible centres in the Blushing Bride proteas

Just spectacular!

The display was aromatic too, so one had a feeling of walking in the bush

Some rare pink Cape Disas

The Blushing Bride protea nearly went extinct from over-picking, but has now recovered
mainly with help from good horticulturists

Blue Streptocarpus and pink Ericas

Pink Streptocarpus

Grootbos had stands selling many items covered in flowers - rare prints, books, even clothing, sold with a smile

Another glorious sight

We loved the way the proteas were interplanted with Berlezia which made them stand out more.

Pincushion Proteas  Leucospermum and pale green leucodendrons

Nerina close-up

Pin cushions are from the Leucospermum family, this is a rare one

Protea cynaroides, also called the King protea, is a  distinctive member of Proteaceae, 
having the largest flower head in the genus
It is South Africa's National flower

So unusual and never seen before by many enthusiasts this strange but rather beautiful Protea 

Another careful and considered interplanting of the white proteas with these hairy chrysanthemum-like leucodendrons

Gloriously coloured pink Queen proteas

Fire-tipped Leucospermum

Dotty and a riot of colour - Pink and red proteas interplanted with pale silver leaves 

A range of essential oils and bath products was on a sales table

So many photographs were taken, cell phones were everywhere - and even a few real cameras

Some plantings were really dramatic

More Pincushions. There are so many Leucospermum varieties

So delighted to see this very rare protea, the Moss Rose

So soft, so fragile... 

The man who conducts the orchestra and has the visions,
plant expert and exhibit designer Leon Kluge speaking to a visitor

Which print to buy?

Great short floral pyjamas

Peering closely... minute detail, infinite artistic skill in the watercolours

Standing in awe

Chinkerinchee Ornithogalum thyrsoides

Must get that shot...

Can you see that one...? What is it?

So many varieties, so hard to find the correct names

They deserve a close up. More beautiful Cape Primroses 

Shall we buy that one?

Admiring looks


 We are so fortunate to live in a truly spectacularly beautiful environment and must do everything possible to protect it


All the stories we have produced since 2012 can be opened from the archive list near the top of the column on the right of this page

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