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New Garden Category Celebrating Career Changers at RHS Flower Show Tatton Park 2024

Today, the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) announces the first designers to enter the inaugural RHS Career Changer of the Year, a new category at RHS Flower Show Tatton Park, celebrating those who have found a new path in the horticultural industry.

The category has been created specifically for new designers, plantspeople, and contractors aged 31 and over to help kick-start their careers in horticulture.
 
Inspired by his experiences as a police officer and work in public services supporting victims of crime, Chris Reynolds’ The Safe Space Garden is designed as a nourishing and inclusive space to aid victims of crime in their recovery. The garden’s planting and use of water is designed to be immersive, rhythmic, and soothing, encouraging the user to engage with their senses and promote feelings of safety. Reynolds, who retrained in 2022, is working with Victim Support, a charity supporting people impacted by crime, to create his garden which will be relocated to one of their support centres after the show.
 
After a 25-year career in marketing, Nadine Mansfield retrained in 2020 and now makes her RHS debut with The Better New Build Garden. Mansfield aims to inspire new build homeowners and property developers to make more of their outside spaces with a design that focuses on supporting wildlife. Her garden is packed with pollinator friendly planting, native hedges and trees for bird habitat, as well as reclaimed oak and gabion insect habitats to show how new build gardens, which are often left as bare soil or covered with artificial grass, can be turned into a wildlife paradise.
 
Also focusing on planet-friendly gardening, Jon Pilling, previously a higher-level teaching assistant, explores sustainable gardening approaches in his The RHS If a Tree Falls Garden. The garden features reclaimed and recycled materials and explores how we can use what nature provides to minimise our impact on the environment. The planting design is inspired by the perennial movement and uses plants that can be found naturalised in the UK.
 
RHS Flower Show Tatton Park 2024 also sees the return of RHS Young Designer of the Year which this year sees Ashleigh Aylett and Callum Corrie making their debut. Aylett’s design, The Woodland Trust: 49% Garden, highlights the importance of ‘trees outside woods’ and how the UK has lost 49% of these trees since 1850 due to pests, diseases, and other threats. In Entertaining Meets Nature, Corrie, who is also a part time wrestler, has created a garden that is sustainable and wildlife friendly, whilst also perfect for entertaining friends and family.
 
Lex Falleyn, RHS Tatton Park Show Manager, said: “When chatting to potential Show Garden applicants we noticed a trend in interested applicants who had previously worked in different industries. As a career changer myself, I felt it was important to highlight the benefits of changing into the horticultural sector and these new gardens would make an inspiring companion category alongside RHS Young Designer of the Year. Landscape design requires a diverse range of skills and it’s been so interesting to see just how many skills are transferable.”
 
RHS Flower Show Tatton Park takes place from 17-21 July. Tickets can be bought here: www.rhs.org.uk/tatton

Notes to editors

For interviews or images please contact the RHS Press Office at [email protected]
 
RHS Flower Show Tatton Park (17 – 21 July 2024):
Wednesday: RHS Members’ Day, 10am – 5pm
Thursday – Saturday: 10am – 5pm
Sunday: 10am – 5pm (sell off of displays begins at 4pm)
 
To book tickets visit www.rhs.org.uk/tatton
 
About the RHS
Since our formation in 1804, the RHS has grown into the UK’s leading gardening charity, touching the lives of millions of people. Perhaps the secret to our longevity is that we’ve never stood still. In the last decade alone we’ve taken on the largest hands-on project the RHS has ever tackled by opening the new RHS Garden Bridgewater in Salford, Greater Manchester, and invested in the science that underpins all our work by building RHS Hilltop – The Home of Gardening Science.

We have committed to being net positive for nature and people by 2030. We are also committed to being truly inclusive and to reflect all the communities of the UK.
 
Across our five RHS gardens we welcome more than three million visitors each year to enjoy over 34,000 different cultivated plants. Events such as the world famous RHS Chelsea Flower Show, other national shows, our schools and community work, and partnerships such as Britain in Bloom, all spread the shared joy of gardening to wide-reaching audiences.

Throughout it all we’ve held true to our charitable core – to encourage and improve the science, art and practice of horticulture –to share the love of gardening and the positive benefits it brings.

For more information visit www.rhs.org.uk.

RHS Registered Charity No. 222879/SC038262

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The Royal Horticultural Society is the UK’s leading gardening charity. We aim to enrich everyone’s life through plants, and make the UK a greener and more beautiful place.