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Imaginative garden design brings student gold award

A GARDEN designed by a Nottingham Trent University student has picked up a top award at the Chelsea Flower Show.

Jackie Setchfield entered her version of a 1950s Hebridean weaver’s garden at the world-famous show.

  1. Beaming winner:  Jackie Setchfield with Martin Anderson in her Hebridean weaver's garden at the Chelsea Flower Show. Inset: How the garden was constructed.

    Beaming winner: Jackie Setchfield with Martin Anderson in her Hebridean weaver’s garden at the Chelsea Flower Show. Inset: How the garden was constructed.

It was one of four 5x4m gardens entered into the artisan section of the centenary show, with Jackie’s being voted the best and picking up a gold award.

“I’m overjoyed,” she told the Post from the show. “I don’t think it will properly sink in for a couple of months.


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“It has made all of the hard work seem worth it. It is a fantastic honour to win this award.”

Students from across the university’s horticulture courses helped to develop the “Motor Neurone Disease – A Hebridean Weaver’s Garden” with Jackie, who is studying a foundation degree in garden design.

The show, which started on Tuesday, runs until Saturday.

Jackie visited the area to gain inspiration for her design.

It depicted a garden on the Isle of Lewis, brimming with dye plants. The garden was intended to be a nostalgic look back to an arduous way of life for the tight-knit communities in the 1950s.

As well as a blackhouse structure, it includes a spinning wheel, dye pot and a range of dye plants available in the middle of the last century.

There is a stream – or burn – with small waterfalls, along with wetland plants, wildflowers such as foxgloves and tufted vetch, as well as heathers, ferns, a tree and a small kitchen garden growing potatoes, onions and cabbages.

Jackie also worked with Motor Neurone Disease Association co-founder Martin Anderson on the design. It was created to help raise awareness of the charity.

Mr Anderson said: “I feel exhausted, elated and stunned. You always hope for gold but never know until you open the envelope. It is a fantastic achievement for everyone involved, especially with the weather being against us this year at every stage.”

Carol Wright, a senior lecturer in horticulture at Nottingham Trent University, said: “Everyone who has been involved is thrilled to have achieved a gold medal. The whole team have worked so hard to meet all the challenges involved and it is fantastic to get such a good result.”

Jackie added: “The award was announced on Tuesday morning before I even arrived. So I got there to a nice surprise.”

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