Sarah Eberle Wins Best in Show at Chelsea Flower Show with Haunting Garden

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James Morrison
World - 19 May 2026

Sarah Eberle’s garden featuring a giant, slumbering woman carved from a fallen tree has won the top prize at the Chelsea Flower Show, earning her the title of the Royal Horticultural Society’s most decorated gardener.

Eberle, now the most awarded gardener in RHS history, is a rarity at Chelsea: she is one of only three women to have won Best in Show as a solo designer in the event’s 100-year history.

Her garden, created for the Campaign to Protect Rural England, was described as “mesmerising” by the judging panel.

The space is dominated by a giant statue of Mother Nature, with still pools and soft fronds of grass and wildflowers.

It was designed to represent the often overlooked countryside at the edge of towns and cities, which CPRE describes as vital green spaces connecting people to nature.

Eberle, 71, said: “I am thrilled to bits to receive Garden of the Year. This garden’s mission is very personal to me. I am a country girl through and through so I embody the same message and beliefs that the Campaign to Protect Rural England and this garden holds.”

The judges commented on the moving atmosphere created by the dreamy planting.

Chris Bailes, chair of the judging panel, said: “Sarah’s garden combines elements of myth and remarkable theatre. The planting speaks to an exceptionally rare sense of atmosphere, created through a clear connection to the urban and the countryside. Unexpected beauty is found in the concrete drain repurposed from an agricultural accessory into a mesmerising water feature using common duckweed.”

Recent days have seen considerable commentary among female garden designers about the lack of representation at the flower show.

Writer Clare Coulson, who featured many female gardeners in her book Wonderlands, which focuses on British garden design, lamented the gender imbalance at Chelsea.

She said: “Every year I am completely perplexed by the lack of female designers at Chelsea, at least on the more ‘showy’ main avenue gardens. It’s a conversation I have a lot with designers and gardeners. Last year Jo Thompson’s garden was the only Main Avenue garden designed by a woman. This year, of nine main avenue show gardens, there are two female designers. Even a garden designed to foreground specifically female cancers is designed by a man.”

Coulson was referring to the Silent No More garden, designed by Darren Hawkes, which aims to “open up uninhibited conversations about gynaecological health.”

Garden designer Elizabeth Tyler said: “We all burst out in incredulity in the studio as we realised that the garden for a specifically women’s cancer charity was being designed by a man, amongst other incredulities. I have a list on my phone of all the best in show winners for the last 20 years … many more men called Tom than women?”

Sam Proctor, an award-winning Chelsea designer, added: “I was lucky to be supported by my husband and had no direct caring responsibilities when I did Chelsea. But colleagues with kids were super reliant on family – not just for the show itself but the build and all the other times we have to go above and beyond as lead designer on a show garden. And if you’re not local to London it must be a lot worse, being away from home for two to three weeks solid.”

Over her 50-year horticulture career, Eberle has often been described as an anomaly in a male-dominated industry. She said in the past: “The reason I think more women don’t do Chelsea is because they have a better life balance. It takes over your life if you’re not careful. But garden designing is not the only profession where there are more men than women at the top. Most chefs are women but the high-profile ones are men.”

The result brings Eberle’s RHS Chelsea gold medal count to 14 and her Best In Category wins to four, the most of any designer in the show’s history.

Other winners at the show this year include Joe and Laura Carey, who won Best Small Show Garden with Addleshaw Goddard: Flourish in the City, a garden celebrating London’s hidden gardens and pocket-sized oases.

Best All About Plants Garden was awarded to Woodland Trust: Forgotten Forests Garden by Ashleigh Aylett. Best Balcony and Container Garden went to A Little Garden of Shared Knowledge, sponsored by Viking, by Katerina Kantalis.

📝 This article was rewritten with AI assistance based on content from The Guardian.
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