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Sandringham Flower Show returns before break
Sandringham Flower Show returns before break

BBC News

time7 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • BBC News

Sandringham Flower Show returns before break

A local flower show held for the past 142 years on the King's Norfolk estate is getting under way before it takes a two-year annual Sandringham Flower Show, organised by 15 to 20 local volunteers, attracts about 20,000 people each year and is taking place on Wednesday, to be attended by King Charles III and Queen the event will pause to make way for the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) touring flower show in 2026 and 2029.A spokeswoman for the locally organised show said it was "fully supportive" of the new RHS event. "We're doing what we can to help them and they're doing what they can to help us," she year was the first time in 30 years no member of the Royal Family had attended the Sandringham Flower Show was a favourite of Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, who attended each year after World War Two. The show traditionally sees local colleges, agricultural businesses and experts taking part, while in the amateurs' marquee, local gardening and horticultural clubs enter a judged display competition.A month before the show, Royal estate employees, pensioners and tenants have the opportunity to enter their gardens in two judged Flower Show's profits are donated annually to local charities, and it said it had given more than £825,000 since 1977. A year ago, Graham Brown, chair of the show, said: "The future of the show is going to carry on."I will see the show through the RHS and we will work with them to make sure our show is incorporated with their show."Sandringham is changing and we all have to move with that." The King became patron of the RHS in 2024 and its 2026 event will be a six-day its website, RHS director general Clare Matterson said the decision to run the new touring events was to ensure it reached more people "in new locations".RHS director of shows, commercial and innovation, Helena Pettit, said the changes were the biggest it had made in a generation."We want to inspire current and new audiences with world class horticulture and provide access to the UK's best plants people to help even more people garden and grow," she said. Follow Norfolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

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