Ashby: Chelsea Flower Show 'garden of the future' has been unveiled at Conkers Centre

By The Editor

1st Aug 2022 | Local News

The Meta Garden can now be seen at Conkers. Photo: The National Forest
The Meta Garden can now be seen at Conkers. Photo: The National Forest

Joe Perkins's award-winning Chelsea Flower Show creation - The Meta Garden: Growing the Future - has been officially unveiled at Conkers Discovery Centre in Moira,

The garden is designed to reflect the many communities and partnerships that have come together over the last 30 years to help create the National Forest, the volunteers who have helped Joe's team recreate the garden at Conkers and who will look after it in the future, and also the many community woodland groups in the Forest who use Meta's social platforms to help manage their voluntary work. 

The design highlights mycelium, the crucial relationship between soil, fungi and plants, which together form the basis of resilient forest ecosystems, and has been specially redesigned to fit the larger space at Conkers and the surrounding National Forest woodland.  

The Meta Garden is all about championing natural solutions to climate change and how people can both create more and protect the British woodlands.

By reusing the garden and making it part of Conkers - a move which was revealed in April - more people will be able to see the garden at its new home.

Joe said: "I hope visitors to the garden will feel immersed in and inspired by nature's interconnectedness and the myriad of macro and microscopic networks in nature that depend on each other to heal, grow, and thrive.  

"There is an urgent need to redress the balance of our relationship with the natural world, and there is so much to learn from the connections in nature, both in terms of how we learn to support and preserve sustainable forest ecosystems, and in how we come together as communities - in-person and on platforms like Facebook and Instagram - to tackle climate change.

This is how the garden looked in an artist's impression released earier this year

"The best bit is that the garden now has a permanent home, here in the National Forest, and it's open to people here, so that can help strengthen communities and gives children a chance to interact with nature." 

John Everitt, chief executive of the National Forest, said: "This is a forest of people, as much as trees, and is a forest for everyone.

"We are stronger growing together, as an entity, like the forest itself and the unseen mycelium that underpins its biodiversity.

"The networks of the National Forest are strong, and are essential to the changes we have seen over the past 30 years working with partners to create the Forest. We believe in the power of trees to transform people's lives and the landscape, and are excited to see Joe Perkins's Meta garden relocated to the Forest.

"Many more people will be able to see it here and enjoy his interpretation of our interdependence through a forest-inspired garden." 

The garden highlights the benefits of increasing the UK's tree coverage to combat climate change.

The National Forest has increased forest cover throughout its 200 square miles from six per cent to 22 per cent with the planting of nine million trees.

And 85 per cent of woodlands in the National Forest are in active management, which encourages biodiversity and helps mitigate against climate change. 

If you would like to visit the garden, you can purchase tickets for Conkers HERE

     

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