About the RHS
\nThe Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) was founded in 1804 and is the UK’s largest gardening charity.
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\nThe RHS vision is to enrich everyone’s life through plants, and make the UK a greener and more beautiful place via its inspirational gardens and shows, science research and advisory, extensive library collections and far-reaching education and community programmes. With over 600,000 members the RHS also shares its horticultural knowledge and expertise with millions of people every year through its website and publications.
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\nIn 2021, the RHS launched its Sustainability Strategy, committing to be net positive for nature and people by 2030. The supporting RHS Planet-Friendly Gardening Campaign will continue to harness the power of the UK’s 30 million gardeners to help tackle the climate and biodiversity crisis.
\nWe are solely funded by our members, visitors and supporters.
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For any further queries please contact pressoffice@rhs.org.uk 

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Leadership  \n\n
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Director General: Clare Matterson, from 2022.
\nPresident: Keith Weed, elected at the RHS AGM in 2020.

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RHS Members\n\n
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As of January 2022, the RHS officially reached 600,000 members.
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\nRHS members receive free access to RHS Gardens and over 200 partner RHS partner gardens.
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\nAt shows and events, members enjoy access to exclusive members’ days and discounts for public days.
\nMembers receive exclusive access to the Garden, the RHS members’ magazine. They can also take advantage of an exclusive advice service from our horticultural experts and order seeds harvested from RHS Gardens, and borrow from the RHS Lindley Library. Members also receive access to a variety of exclusive offers in RHS Shops and Plant Centres.
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\nMembership contributions help support all aspects of our work, from supporting community gardening groups to conducting world-class horticultural science.

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RHS Gardens\n\n
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From local garden shows, to scientific research, to community work and educational opportunities, the 5 RHS gardens showcase all of our different work strands.

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RHS Garden Wisley

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The RHS was gifted Wisley in 1903, opening to the public in 1906 and attracting 6000 visitors in its first year. The RHS’ flagship garden in Surrey, RHS Garden Wisley covers 240 acres, attracting around 1 million visitors a year. Home to spectacular glasshouses, vibrant garden inspiration and world-class horticultural science at RHS Hilltop.

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RHS Garden Hyde Hall

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Located in rural Essex, RHS Garden Hyde Hall was acquired in 1993, now covering 365 acres with highlights such as the Dry Garden with its host of drought resistant plants and stunning Wildwood.

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RHS Garden Rosemoor

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Found in North Devon Torridge Valley, Rosemoor was gifted to the RHS in 1988, now covering 65 acres. Rosemoor provides year-round interest from its spring cherry blossoms to its frosty winter garden.

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RHS Garden Harlow Carr

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Initially established in the Yorkshire countryside by the Northern Horticultural Society, RHS Garden Harlow Carr has been open to visitors since 1950. Now covering 58 hectares, Harlow Carr hosts an extensive plant collection with a variety of growing landscapes.

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RHS Garden Bridgewater

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Our newest garden, RHS Garden Bridgewater opened in Salford in summer 2021. Found in the grounds of the former Worsley New Hall, Bridgewater embraces the sites heritage with strong connections to the local community.

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RHS Shows\n\n
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RHS Chelsea Flower Show

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2023 Show Dates: 23 - 27 May

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Since 1913, the Royal Chelsea Hospital has hosted the world-renowned Chelsea Flower Show, showcasing world class gardens, peerless exhibitors, glorious floristry, and innovative and educational science exhibits. The show is held every May except in 2021 when the RHS hosted a one-time September show, embracing autumn colours and new exhibits such as balcony and container gardens, house plants and even giant vegetables.
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\nUp to 168,000 visitors are expected in a normal year, reduced to 142,000 with Covid safety measures in 2021.
\nRHS advisors provide gardening advice to over 4,150 visitors during the show, a benefit normally reserved for RHS members.
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\nThe BBC began television coverage in 1958. Originally, just one programme, coverage now extends through the whole week and reaches millions of viewers.
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\nFind information for press and media about RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2023 here.
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RHS Hampton Court Palace Garden Festival

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2023 Show Dates: 4 - 9 July

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The flower show at Hampton Court Palace was first organised by Adrian Boyd in 1990. The RHS took over the running of the show in 1993 and has held a show on the parklands ever since.
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\nRecently relaunched as a festival, it attracts artists, performers, chefs and more to the many varied stages and eateries. Approximately 130,000 visitors attend the show each year, in 2021 numbers were capped at 100,000 for Covid safety measures.
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RHS Flower Show Tatton Park

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2023 Show Dates: 19-23 July 

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The RHS Flower Show Tatton Park was first held in 1999 in the magnificent parkland of Tatton Park, Cheshire. The show hosts around 80,000 visitors every year with features such as the National Young Garden Designer Competition, Show Gardens and Floral Marquee.

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Community Gardening\n\n
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The RHS supports a huge variety of community projects and initiatives to help promote collective well-being, support schools and build horticultural skills.

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Britain in Bloom

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Britain's nationwide gardening competition seeks to build communities and encourage local residents to improve their neighbourhood environments. Around 3500 groups participate across 16 regional and national competitions every year to transform their local community, creating wide-ranging social and environmental benefits.

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It's Your Neighbourhood

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It’s Your Neighbourhood is a non-competitive scheme for community groups who want to ‘green up’ local areas –adding some colour to your community, making new friends and getting active in your local area.

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Campaign for School Gardening

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The RHS Campaign for School Gardening and Green Plan It scheme supports over 38,000 schools and youth groups. Inspiring young people through the power of plants, offering free resources, projects and guidance to get them growing with benefits such as improvements in mental and physical well-being, increased confidence, developed sense of responsibility and knowledge about biodiversity and sustainability.

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Science\n\n
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The RHS’ founding purpose was to improve the science, art and practice of horticulture. We continue this with ground-breaking horticultural research, improving the health and people and nature.

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RHS Science Strategy 2020-2025

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The RHS five year science strategy focuses on examining the horticultural challenges of today’s gardeners, delivered along three key themes:

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    Promoting garden plant diversity

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    Plant health: healthy plants, gardens and wildlife

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    Environmental gardening for wellbeing

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RHS Hilltop - The Home of Gardening Science

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Opened in June 2021, RHS Hilltop is the UK’s first dedicated horticultural scientific centre of excellence, costing £35 million to build. The site at RHS Wisley includes exciting new spaces:

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  1. Three purpose built laboratories to support research
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  3. A herbarium and digitisation suite
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  5. Two learning studios and a teaching garden
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  7. Three new gardens: The World Food Garden, Wildlife Garden and Wellbeing Garden.
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Sustainability and the Environment\n\n
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The RHS is committed to environmentally-friendly practices to help create a more sustainable future for gardening.
\nGardens have a significant role to play in helping to offset carbon emissions and improve biodiversity in the UK. The ONS estimates that in 2015 1.4 million tonnes of air pollutants were removed nationally by woodlands, plants, grasslands and other vegetation, saving the UK around £1 billion in avoided health damage costs and averting 1,900 deaths.

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RHS Sustainability Strategy

\nThe RHS is striving to become a more planet-positive organisation across all of our activities. We will enact this through our sustainability strategy, becoming a net positive for nature and people with ten targets to reach by 2030:\n\n
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  1. Climate positive by 2030
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  3. Biodiversity positive by 2025
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  5. Biosecurity neutral by 2025
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  7. Water neutral by 2030
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  9. Circular plastic by 2030
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  11. Zero waste to landfill by 2030
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  13. Enable more people to enjoy the benefits of gardening
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  15. Design a new evidence-based wellbeing Garden Blueprint by 2025
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  17. Develop and embed sustainable horticulture within education, research and training
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  19. Accelerate equality, diversity and inclusion
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Planet-Friendly Gardening

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We are encouraging all gardeners to participate in the Planet-Friendly Gardening campaign, with 10 ways for everyone to be more sustainable in their gardens:

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  1. Plant a tree to help trap carbon.
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  3. Switch from mains to rains in your gardens to save carbon. Over 10.96 million litres of mains water have already been pledged.
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  5. Switch to peat-free compost to protect precious carbon-storing peatlands which provide valuable eco-systems for plants and animals and help to prevent flooding.
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  7. Make your own compost to save carbon
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  9. Pull up paving slabs and replant with perennial plants
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  11. Help bees and butterflies by planting pollinator-friendly plants
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  13. Grow your own or buy UK-grown cut flowers to save carbon from buying imported bunches
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  15. Electrify your garden to offset carbon emissions, harmful particulates and noise pollution caused by petrol-based power tools
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  17. Help map UL garden plant diversity by adding your garden plants to RHS My Garden online
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  19. Eat more home-grown Uk, local and seasonal fruit and vegetables
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