After an absence of four years South African flowers once again took centre stage at the 2024 Chelsea Flower Show. (Photo: Sven Musica)
South Africa’s triumphant return to the world’s greatest floral fest, the Royal Horticultural Society, Chelsea Flower Show followed a hard and long journey.
Despite being absent from what was described as the Olympic equivalent of the flower, plant and landscape design world, for four years due to funding problems, South Africa returned in 2024 with a bang, or rather a bloom, winning a gold medal and awards for the Best Exhibit in the Pavilion and the Best New Design – a first for the country.
South Africa has been winning gold at the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) Chelsea Flower Show in London since 1976 – for 43 years. Before this year the last time the country competed was in 2019 when it won gold again.
However, after the Covid-19 pandemic, the team faced the almost insurmountable problem of having to acquire new sponsors as the South African National Biodiversity Institute (Sanbi), the previous donor, was unable to support the South African exhibition at the show.
Marinda Nel, project manager of South Africa’s exhibit at the show this year and previous chair of the Botanical Society Kirstenbosch Branch, said this year’s exhibit was possible because of a small team from the private sector, civil society, partners and encouragement from members of the RHS and the Chelsea Show management.
“It was a completely wild process from the beginning. We’ve been asked by so many South Africans who were saddened that we were no longer at Chelsea. People took great pride in the fact that we were winning and people are really passionate about fynbos,” she said.
This year’s exhibit was inspired by the Cape mountains – a series of ranges that run from Cederberg, 200km north of the Cape Peninsula, along the coast for 850km to Gqeberha in the east. Large panels weave through the exhibit’s landscape as if carved by nature, creating an earthy backdrop for vibrant flora to take centre stage.
Sourcing 22,000 rare flowers and plants from remote farms around South Africa to London was not an easy task, for an exhibit showcasing the country’s diversity from the coastal sands to the rich fynbos found in different biomes of hills and mountains and cut-flower hybrids.
After an absence of four years South African flowers once again took centre stage at the 2024 Chelsea Flower Show. (Photo: Sven Musica)
The hardware and the sculpting were done using wood, clay and hay bales, while the flower display consisted of about 14 different protea species and 22,000 flower stalks in the garden.
In an interview with Daily Maverick, the head designer of the exhibit and floral installer, Leon Kluge, said some of the furthest flowers collected were from KwaZulu-Natal, the King Proteas. Then the team moved down the Garden Route and up to Cederberg.
This year… five minutes before judging, we had a big dove coming to sit on our walls (the clay mountains)… and made his mark on our wall. It caused a lot of drama.
The process of bringing the flowers to the show was meticulously planned. Proteas were carefully harvested from various remote farms and transported to Cape Town. From there they travelled to Dubai and then to London.
Kluge said: “Each farm has something really unique and it was only harvested from cut-flower farms, so no wild harvesting whatsoever. Proteas are now being grown in Australia, Hawaii and Argentina, but we are the hub of proteas and we have so many more species that we want to present here.
“By the time the flowers arrive at the show, they are already a week old. We immediately then cut all the stems so they can drink because they are really dehydrated and thirsty. They’re all flat and don’t look rich at that moment, so we put them in buckets of water and then they slowly start to drink and puff out.”
The resilience is one of the reasons proteas are such successful cut flowers, capable of lasting more than a month in a vase and retaining their beauty even when dried.
Lead designer Leon Kluge (left) and Tristan Woudberg, who built the clay mountain walls inside the exhibit. (Photo: Sven Musica)
King Charles came to view South Africa’s garden at the show on Wednesday. Here the king is pictured with Leon Kluge and Marinda Nel. (Photo: Supplied)
Kluge and his team, including Tristan Woudberg who handled the hard landscaping and clay mountain sculptures, worked tirelessly to bring the exhibit to life, along with volunteers who sorted out their flights and accommodation.
“It’s a hell of a lot of work with a very short timeframe. It took one week to build and then one week for the flower installation. Then at the end of the two weeks is the judging,
“This year… five minutes before judging, we had a big dove coming to sit on our walls (the clay mountains), one of these London doves, and then made his mark on our wall. It caused a lot of drama… There was nothing we could do. It was nature’s painting on our clay,” he said.
Despite the challenges, the team’s hard work paid off.
The inspiration behind the exhibit
South Africa is home to the Cape Floral Region, one of the six identified floristic kingdoms in the world. It is also a Unesco heritage site, representing less than 0.5% of Africa but containing 20% of the continent’s flora.
The density, endemism and diversity of an estimated 9,000 plant species have made this region one of the world’s 35 biodiversity hotspots. Kluge said the sculpted clay mountains represented the dramatic mountain ranges from the fynbos areas of the Cape.
“Those mountain ranges create a few things. First are little pockets of endemic species that only occur in those habitats in between the mountains. That’s where the windows come in, so you have a little look into those little pockets where very rare proteas and fynbos usually occur that most people have never seen.
“The cracks in the clay represent our extremities in our seasonal change. We have a really wet, cold but very colourful and green winter in the Cape, in the fynbos. Then at the same time in summer, it’s really dry and the earth cracks open, and it’s the time when the proteas are resting a bit. That’s all necessary for them to be healthy,” he said.
Kluge said it was very important to keep the flowers at a very low temperature throughout the trip to the show.
At some point in February this year we still thought we wouldn’t make it because we were not nearly as far as we wanted to be in regards to the funding. It all pulled through at the last minute.
An agent travels with all 22,000 flower stems from Cape Town International Airport to Dubai International Airport, and then to London for the show where the flowers are delivered back to the team. The agent is responsible for getting the flowers cleared at customs, making sure there are no infestations, and keeping them cool and fresh throughout the journey.
Large panels weave through the exhibit’s landscape as if carved by nature, creating an earthy backdrop for the vibrant flora to take centre stage. (Photo: Sven Musica)
South Africa’s exhibit was inspired by the Cape mountains, in particular, the Cape Fold Belt, a series of mountain ranges that run from Cederberg, 200km north of the Cape Peninsula, along the coast for 850km to the town of Gqeberha in the east. (Photo: Sven Musica)
Kluge said the biggest challenge is when the flowers arrive at the airport in the UK, where they need all the paperwork ready and they are all treated for all kinds of insects or diseases – which is crucial because if authorities find something, then the whole consignment might be destroyed.
The team said the award-winning exhibit would not have been possible without the support of the Rupert Nature Foundation (which saved the day at the 11th hour by coming on board earlier this year), Michael Lutzeyer from the Grootbos Foundation, Cape Flora SA, Keith Kirsten from Keith Kirsten Horticulture, and Marinda Nel.
Funding difficulties
When Sanbi said they were no longer going to be involved, it was quite a blow.
Kluge said: “There was an outcry from a lot of people who were quite upset about it because we are the highlight at the RHS Flower Show, we are one of the biggest stands in the grand marquee and a lot of people come just to see the fynbos of South Africa, because a lot of people never get to travel to South Africa to see it in the wild.
“It took a few years for us to convince people that we can do it on our own here at the Chelsea Flower Show, and the Rupert Foundation provided a lot of the money along with Grootbos Nature Reserve.
“The nature reserve is one of the first reserves in the world that does safaris only for flowers. You get in a safari vehicle and they take you through just to look at flowers, the big five in the Proteas and other things. This is quite a new industry in the Western Cape and it’s something that we need to treasure because once it’s gone, it can never be replaced and replanted. We have to try to save what we have.”
The king actually knows a little bit about plants… He remembers seeing all the fynbos when he visited Cape Town and the proteas.
He added that raising awareness here about fynbos and its fragility back in the Cape was a key component of their exhibit because it’s the world’s richest kingdom of flowers but the world’s smallest and most vulnerable.
Foremost, Kluge said, this creates opportunities for companies, people and farmers to get involved in protecting what they have on their land and could create a new industry like Grootbos did – changing from farming into a fynbos landscape nature reserve protecting the country’s national heritage.
“We didn’t think we would be [back] here, but we were trying our best and at some point in February this year we still thought we wouldn’t make it because we were not nearly as far as we wanted to be in regards to the funding. It all pulled through at the last minute.”
Kirsten – who has been involved at the Chelsea Flower Show for more than 25 years and co-sponsor when South Africa’s participation was organised through Sanbi at Kirstenbosch – said they received an endorsement from the Kirstenbosch branch of the Botanical Society of South Africa.
“It was civil society, conservation groups and the private sector that came to our aid and got us back here after four years, two years of Covid-19 and two years we weren’t here… It was the will of South Africans and nature environmentalists to get South Africa back because it’s such an important stage for horticulture, conservation biodiversity, climate change and [to] represent South Africa from a tourism point of view,” Kirsten said.
A royal visit
Kluge said: “The Chelsea Flower Show is the Olympic equivalent of the flower, plant and landscape design world. So a gold here is the highest award you can get in the world. We got our gold, and then they surprised us again with the ‘Best on Show award which is the highest award South Africa’s ever received in their tenure at the Chelsea Flower Show. Then they also gave us the Best New Design award, which they give out if they feel that a design is really pushing boundaries and giving them something new on the world stage, which we are very proud of.”
King Charles and Queen Camilla visited the South African exhibition on Tuesday. “The king actually knows a little bit about plants… He remembers seeing all the fynbos when he visited Cape Town and the proteas. It was quite a fun conversation and I was talking about some new species that we have on the stand that’s never been here, that’s extremely rare, and he was very interested in knowing a little bit more about it,” Kluge said.
These new and rare species of protea were extremely rare in the wild and were pollinated by mice.
“A lot of people don’t know how but a lot of proteas are very dependent on mice pollination. They are called Shy Proteas and they’re almost extinct in the wild. There are some farms that are trying to revive them, and we got some flowers from them.
“Then there was the Blushing Bride, which is a world-famous flower for weddings, but the plant in the wild is almost extinct – it’s found in Franschhoek and there’s only a handful left. So, this is also trying to raise a bit of awareness in saving and trying to keep them alive in their natural habitat.”
Credit: Daily Maverick – Kristin Engel