In This Issue
Overtime/Undertime — How to Control It
Monty Miracle celebrates record growth with new listings, accolades and products
April ‘resounding success’ for GCA garden centres
Durstons holds prices and keeps compost moving
RHS Chelsea Flower Show sells out ahead of opening
HTA member businesses at the heart of Chelsea
GCA announces 2026 summer regional award meetings
Warm April offset cautious shoppers in garden centres
GIMA Awards 2026 judges confirmed
Greenfingers Charity to relocate RHS Malvern People’s Choice winner ‘Lifted by Birds’
Zest MD completes Boston marathon for charity
HTA & BOA announce new grant scheme to benefit UK environmental horticulture production
Leaders of influence interviews in the latest issue of GTN magazine, read on-line here
Get your copy of GTN Xtra
Dobbies supports 53 community garden projects
New £3 million centre to help grow healthy gardens
Garden retail sector urged to don floral finery in support of Greenfingers Kilimanjaro trekkers
Napoleon launches the OASIS 106 Outdoor Kitchen
Charitable garden centre Chestnut Nursery wins two awards at celebration of business excellence
Henton & Chattell marks start of 95th anniversary celebrations with momentous expansions for Cobra
Hillier signs as founding retail partner of Spacelift
elho secures second major international design award
Wyevale Nurseries appoints new Finance Director
Sales Manager marks quarter-century at Bulrus
Explore new collections and innovations at Kettler’s June Trade Show
HTA response to the King’s Speech 2026
Are cities measuring the real value of plants?
Research reveals home and garden brands win on feeling, not just features
Record visitor numbers at BBC Gardeners’ World Spring Fair
EGO introduces cordless 3-in-1 inflator
World Therapeutic Horticulture Day celebrates the life-changing impact of gardening
The best of last week's
Blue Diamond profits up by 44% in 2025
DCUK awarded King’s Award for Enterprise
Scottish Air-Pot developer wins King’s Award
Klass Koncept unveiled at Gates Garden Centre
Sir David Attenborough at 100
Sustainable gifting in garden trade 
Alan Roper and David Domoney film next "Step by Step" episode on the Blue Diamond garden at RHS Chelsea Flower Show
Caulders set to add Merryhatton Garden Centre as their 11th centre
Step outside for Loving Outdoor Living at SOLEX
Send us your news and great ideas

Contact us with your news.

Email trevor@pottingshedpress.co.uk or call the GTN News team on 07973 504214

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


RHS Chelsea Flower Show sells out ahead of opening

 

RHS Chelsea Flower Show, taking place next week, has sold out before opening its doors to the public for the first time since pre-covid, five years ago, as it works harder than ever to support critical RHS charitable work.

 

The capped 150,000 tickets help raise millions of pounds for RHS national community gardening programmes and science research to inform climate change adaptations.  

 

Last year money raised from RHS Chelsea was equivalent to that invested into RHS science and communities work. 

 

The RHS believes that the nation has never needed the joy of gardening so much.  History has shown that in uncertain times people turn to gardening and the RHS is seeing people increasingly turn to gardening for respite, enjoyment and as a way of doing something good for themselves, and the planet.

 

In April there were 4 million visits to the RHS website for gardening advice.  Since the beginning of the year nearly 9 million visits have been made to RHS online. 

 

The RHS is also celebrating its highest April for membership acquisition since the Covid gardening boom in 2021 and 2022 (therefore higher than any point in the past), with some 30K new people signed up for membership since 1 February, 9.7k signed up in April alone.  RHS Garden Wisley also had 176,000 visits this April (its second busiest April in history) and the new RHS Grow App had its biggest April with over 110K users across the month. 

 

Clare Matterson CBE, RHS Director General, says: “RHS Chelsea being a sellout show is great for gardening and the world famous event is our, and horticulture’s, most important fundraiser, enabling the RHS to support and work with thousands of community groups across the UK and provide scientifically backed gardening advice to millions of people.  

 

“This year at Chelsea we’ll also be announcing a new partnership, which will see a major investment boost into, and significantly more support for, community gardening nationally for even greater impact – watch this space.”

 

To further support the next generation of gardeners, the RHS is also lifting the gnome ban at RHS Chelsea and has invited celebrities to decorate gnomes to be auctioned off to raise funds for the RHS’ Campaign for School Gardening.  Celebrities painting gnomes include Cate Blanchett, Dame Mary Berry, Sir Brian May, Baroness Floella Benjamin, Tom Allen and Joanna Lumley.

 

One of the most hotly anticipated gardens in 2026 is The RHS and The King’s Foundation Curious Garden designed by Frances Tophill, who has been joined by Sir David Beckham and Alan Titchmarsh CBE on her journey creating the garden.  The garden encourages the nation to discover the joy of getting curious about gardening and the vital contribution plants make to the health of people, places and planet.  

 

All gardens at RHS Chelsea live on after the Show.  The RHS’ own feature gardens at Chelsea have been living on since 2016 and for decades the RHS has been encouraging gardens to be reused, repurposed and relocated after its shows.

 

Iconic British Brand, Range Rover, is the new 2026 headline sponsor of the RHS Chelsea and its Charity Gala Preview.  Celebrities helping to raise the profile of gardening and supporting the RHS by visiting the show this year include Sir Brian May, Miriam Margolyes, Dame Mary Berry, Adjoah Andoh, Joanna Lumley, Tom Allen, Kim Cattrall, Dominic West, Judi Love and Monica Galetti.

         

Clare finishes: “We encourage people not to buy tickets from touts or third parties.  Often sold for inflated prices there is no guarantee these are authentic and people risk being turned away at the gate.  Better to visit one of our five beautiful RHS Gardens or buy tickets for our exciting new Flower Shows in Badminton or Sandringham.”

 

The RHS is the UK’s Gardening Charity, founded in 1804, today the charity helps millions of people across the country garden and grow for health, happiness and the environment. With a mission to promote the Science, Art and Practice of Horticulture, the charity runs national grass roots school gardening and community gardening movements and conducts vital science research to help mitigate some of the biggest environmental challenges facing us today.

Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Del.icio.us Digg | Comment (0)
Comment
Name:*

Email Address:*

Comment:*