Taken from Brimingham Post.
BBC Gardener's World garden in Birmingham left to rot
A showpiece purpose-built garden has been allowed to �go to seed� after it was ditched as the site for the BBC�s Gardener�s World programme by show bosses.
Experts estimate that the Greenacres garden complex in Edgbaston has cost licence-fee payers hundreds of thousands of pounds for its two-year stint as the base for the BBC 2 programme.
The site - on a disused playing field between Winterbourne Botanical Gardens and Birmingham University - has been left to rot after show bosses relocated filming of the programme to the Herefordshire home of new presenter Monty Don in a bid to revive ratings.
The once-pristine garden has gone to seed with piles of earth standing in the middle of an expensively landscaped lawn and a former exotic garden, planted by former presenter Toby Buckland, now containing just one dead palm tree. A large wooden-framed greenhouse is an empty shell and other plots previously tended by show experts, including Kings Heath-based Alys Fowler, has been completely neglected.
The BBC has refused to say how much licence-payers� cash it spent developing the Edgbaston garden.
But gardening writer Tim Rumball accused programme makers of showing a complete lack of understanding of the views of the British gardening public. �It is horticultural vandalism,� he claimed.
A BBC spokesman said all plants and features from the show were being recycled if possible.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2 years ago at Gardeners World live i donated a tray of hardy Orchids to the team after they appealed for plants for the 'new' GreenAcres site.. i wonder if i should ask for them back??
BBC Gardener's World garden in Birmingham left to rot
A showpiece purpose-built garden has been allowed to �go to seed� after it was ditched as the site for the BBC�s Gardener�s World programme by show bosses.
Experts estimate that the Greenacres garden complex in Edgbaston has cost licence-fee payers hundreds of thousands of pounds for its two-year stint as the base for the BBC 2 programme.
The site - on a disused playing field between Winterbourne Botanical Gardens and Birmingham University - has been left to rot after show bosses relocated filming of the programme to the Herefordshire home of new presenter Monty Don in a bid to revive ratings.
The once-pristine garden has gone to seed with piles of earth standing in the middle of an expensively landscaped lawn and a former exotic garden, planted by former presenter Toby Buckland, now containing just one dead palm tree. A large wooden-framed greenhouse is an empty shell and other plots previously tended by show experts, including Kings Heath-based Alys Fowler, has been completely neglected.
The BBC has refused to say how much licence-payers� cash it spent developing the Edgbaston garden.
But gardening writer Tim Rumball accused programme makers of showing a complete lack of understanding of the views of the British gardening public. �It is horticultural vandalism,� he claimed.
A BBC spokesman said all plants and features from the show were being recycled if possible.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2 years ago at Gardeners World live i donated a tray of hardy Orchids to the team after they appealed for plants for the 'new' GreenAcres site.. i wonder if i should ask for them back??
Comment