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Current
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| CulturalTravels.com - Home | More Festivals | Volume 3, March 2001 |
ISSN 1538-893X |
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Garden
fanciers the world over look |
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As it enters its 113th year this May,
the Royal Horticultural Society’s Chelsea Flower Show finds itself again
at the cutting edge. After all, this is the show that first introduced
bonsai to Europe (in 1913) and instituted the custom of encouraging
horticulturalists and garden suppliers to make the show the place to
announce new plants and products.
The buzz this year is completion of two new
floral display pavilions to replace the great canvas pavilion that had
served the show for 90 years. Made of lightweight plastic that require
less rigging and admit more light, the new pavilions considerably increase
the number of exhibits that can be accommodated, as well as the size of
plants.
Though English weather in May can be notoriously
temperamental, Chelsea usually draws more than 200,000 visitors during its
short four-day run. Exhibitors are up to the challenge, though – some
equip themselves with hair dryers to dry off wet spots of concrete in
their gardens. |
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