AGS Pershore Show 2022 Report


This time last year we were still tightly in the grip of the Covid-19 pandemic. Any thoughts of a face-to-face show at Pershore were fanciful. Recently, three storms in one week, two Red Weather Warnings and some of the highest wind speeds recorded in over 30 years did their best ...(more below)

February 26, 2022
AGS Editor





This time last year we were still tightly in the grip of the Covid-19 pandemic. Any thoughts of a face-to-face show at Pershore were fanciful. Recently, three storms in one week, two Red Weather Warnings and some of the highest wind speeds recorded in over 30 years did their best to interfere with preparations for both plants and show venues. Thankfully, we passed through the worst of the problems and could once again meet up with like-minded people and enjoy wonderful plant exhibits, although face masks were still widely apparent.

Alpine garden society spring plant show displaying colourful potted cyclamen and daffodils at an indoor event in the UK.
Vibrant display of cultivated Alpine flowers in terracotta and ceramic pots, showcased at the Alpine Garden Society exhibition highlighting spring blooms and hardy plants for alpine gardening enthusiasts.

The Henry Hammer Cup, for the most points in the Novice Section, was awarded to Sue Bedwell for a selection of plants mainly comprising Hepatica japonica forms, now stalwarts of the early shows. She was not alone in showing good plants in this section, as Roger Norman confirmed with his well-developed pan of Acis tingitana, deemed by some a little tall but this (the tallest of its genus) can reach 25cm in its native Morocco. Best grown under glass, it does well outside in warm, sheltered gardens.

Purple alpine flowers in a black pot for gardening and plant collection, showcasing the beauty of alpine flora, perfect for alpine gardeners and plant enthusiasts.
Hepatica japonica Yamada exhibited by Sue Bedwell
Snowdrop flowers in a pot, showcasing early spring blooming plants for alpine and rock gardens. Perfect for alpine gardening enthusiasts and snowdrop collectors.
Acis tingitana exhibited by Roger Norman

Both the Tomlinson Tankard (most points in the Intermediate Section) and the Artistic award (Artistic, Intermediate aggregate) were awarded to Lesley Travis, her skills multi-dimensional. Among her plants was a well flowered Hepatica henryi, an evergreen species which is best displayed, as exhibited, with last year’s tired leaves removed. The Artistic Section showed her abilities to work in both colour; a superb picture of Galanthus nivalis in a naturalistic setting and in monochrome, where her subject was Cyclamen libanoticum. Staying in the Artistic Section, not only did Rannveig Wallis take the Muriel Hodgman Art Award (Artistic, Open aggregate) but also the Florence Baker Award for the best painting or drawing, for a delightful watercolour of Cyclamen coum, flowering through the snow.

Hepatica henryi exhibited by Lesley Travis
Hepatica henryi exhibited by Lesley Travis
Painting of Cyclamen coum exhibited by Rannveig Wallis - Florence Baker Award
Painting of Cyclamen coum exhibited by Rannveig Wallis

It isn’t often that a plant in a small pan, let alone one from the Intermediate Section, wins one of the major trophies at a show but, not only did Alistair Forsyth take the Susan Clements Memorial Trophy (Best plant Intermediate and Novice Sections) but also the Audrey Bartholomew Memorial Award (best bulbous plant in show) with an outstanding pan of Narcissus asturiensis; the plant had attracted a ‘buzz’ even before judging started. Purchased many years ago as a single bulb under the name ‘Van Tubergen clone’, this pot-full had Initially been overwintered in an alpine house but has latterly been left outside in a plunge bed all year round, resulting in a much more compact stance. Over forty flowers on short, evenly lengthened stems (one could easily have placed a spirit-level on top, without disturbing the bubble), a ‘host of golden daffodils’ comes to mind. Just topping the aforementioned exhibit, the Ashwood Trophy (best plant in a pot not exceeding 19cm) was won by Robert Rolfe with a delightful selection of Primula allionii labelled BB03/3/4. A twelve-year old plant, selected for its well-formed, vibrant flowers by Brian Burrow (hence the BB), this surely needs to be named (discussions on this front are in hand).

Narcissus asturiensis exhibited by Alistair Forsyth - Susan Clements Memorial Trophy
Narcissus asturiensis exhibited by Alistair Forsyth
Primula allionii BB 03/3/4 exhibited by Robert Rolfe - Ashwood Trophy
Primula allionii BB 03/3/4 exhibited by Robert Rolfe

The EB Anderson prize is awarded to the winner of the small six-pan class, with the qualification that no more than three plants shown can be from the same genus. This was achieved by Paul and Gill Ranson, with three dionysias, two primulas and a Saxifraga (I’m tempted to add a partridge and a pear tree at the end). They also amassed sufficient first prize points to receive the Mooney Cup for the Open Section aggregate prize.

small six pan rock plants exhibited by Paul & Gill Ranson - AGS Medal

Four Certificates of Merit were awarded, one of which went to a venerable pan of Cyclamen parviflorum. Grown from seed sown in 1998 and smothered in flowers held tightly above the mat-like expanse of leaves, this is a difficult, high-altitude plant, the smallest of the genus, shown by Ian Robertson. While noted for his mastery of Cyclamen, he is certainly not a one-trick-pony, as he proved with an exceptional pan of Crocus pelistericus (white form). To quote Ian’s own words, ‘Crocus pelistericus is usually a beautiful deep purple but white forms occur quite frequently. This is a snowmelt species occurring above the tree line, but must be unique in its preference for damp sites. Often found flowering in shallow-standing water and nearly always near bogs and streams, it favours south-facing sites. In the wild it very seldom forms clumps and vegetative is slow. In cultivation, however, increase is quite rapidly and one corm will become fifty in five years if you get the cultivation right’.

Cyclamen parviflorum exhibited by Ian Robertson - Certificate of Merit
Cyclamen parviflorum exhibited by Ian Robertson
White crocus flowers in terracotta pot, alpine garden society, hardy spring bulbs, garden planting, bulb gardening, flowering plants in containers, wildlife garden, early bloomers, floral display, seasonal planting, garden enthusiasts, alpine flora collection, naturalistic garden design, rock garden plants, early spring blooms.
Crocus pelistericus (white form) exhibited by Ian Robertson

A large pan of Dionysia tapetodes ‘Kate’ also received of a Certificate of Merit for its owner, John Dixon. Selected from a batch of seedlings raised back in 1992 and named for his daughter, the plant exhibited was a twenty-two-year-old cutting from the original, testimony to good selection and dedicated cultivation.  The third Certificate, not as large but certainly eye-catching, with its dark, amaranth-red flowers, went to a 19cm pan of Hepatica japonica ‘ex Tessin’. Raised from seed sown in November 2013, this was a repeat of the 2020 award, the plant now appreciably larger and yet more floriferous.

AGS Pershore Show 2022 Dionysia tapetodes 'Kate' exhibited by John Dixon - Certificate of Merit
Dionysia tapetodes ‘Kate’ exhibited by John Dixon
AGS Pershore Show 2022 Hepatica japonica ex Tessin exhibited by Bob Worsley - Certificate of Merit
Hepatica japonica ex Tessin exhibited by Bob Worsley

Bob and Rannveig Wallis staged an array of large, well flowered Corydalis, one of which, Corydalis chionophila var. firouzii, was the last but certainly not least of the quartet of Certificates of Merit at this show. No stranger to awards, being around thirteen years old and flowering to near perfection, this species, like many others in Section Leonticoides, has a relatively large tuber with a ‘corky’ outer skin and occurs buried deep in rocky soil in its native Iran. Good cultivation demands good light, good drainage and a dry summer. Another of their seemingly endless collection was Corydalis nariniana (now Corydalis persica), grown and flowering to perfection, a very worthy recipient of the Farrer Medal.

Corydalis firouzii exhibited by Bob & Rannveig Wallis - Certificate of Merit
Corydalis firouzii exhibited by Bob & Rannveig Wallis
AGS Pershore Show 2022 Corydalis nariniana exhibited by Bob & Rannveig Wallis - Farrer Medal
Corydalis nariniana exhibited by Bob & Rannveig Wallis

Reporter: Ray Drew

Photographer: Jon Evans