Blog by Beebe Cline, PREC*

<< back to article list

9 Self-Seeders Capture Chelsea Flower Show Magic

The paving finish may be exquisite, the water features entrancing, but above all it’s the magic of the planting that really says Chelsea Flower Show. The designers weave the plants together, giving the impression that they have always grown that way and have not just been planted in the few days before judging.

In recent years and again this year in the main show gardens, the plantings have been described by gardening pundits as soft, with roots in the romance of an Arts and Crafts or cottage garden. In this very English style, there are many plants that are used almost as fillers within the main planting, placed to almost give the impression that they have self-seeded.
Cow Parsley or Queen Anne’s Lace
(Anthriscus sylvestris)
Native to Europe, North Africa and Asia
Can be invasive in Washington, Michigan and Massachusetts

The lacy white flowers of cow parsley once again appeared in many of this year’s show gardens, where they threaded their way through the perennial plantings, giving a lightness to it.

Cow parsley is a U.K. native biennial that grows in profusion along the roadsides and hedges in England. Of all the self-seeders, cow parsley is very prolific, so it can be better to grow one of the cultivated varieties, such as the popular Anthriscus sylvestris ‘Ravenswing’, another Chelsea favorite; it has brownish-purple foliage and white flowers with small pink bracts.

Archives