Bath crowned RHS Britain in Bloom overall champion

Bath in Bloom, the inaugural winners of Britain in Bloom, crowned champions in the 60th anniversary year of The Royal Horticultural Society’s nationwide gardening competition.

Bath in Bloom Parade Gardens
Bath in Bloom (credit: RHS)

Britain in Bloom involves around 3,500 community groups and hundreds of thousands of local volunteers who work year-round to keep our neighbourhoods and streets green, clean and thriving. Bloom groups compete in regional and national heats of the competition before being nominated to the Royal Horticultural Society’s (RHS) Britain in Bloom finals. Initially established by the British Tourist Authority as a way to attract visitors to the UK through floral displays, the RHS took over as organisers in 2001 and have developed the campaign to include greater focus on community participation and environmental responsibility.

Fifty-two finalists from across the UK competed in one of the eleven categories in the 2024 Britain in Bloom competition, as well as for an RHS award. Bath in Bloom was crowned the overall winner, winning a gold medal in this year’s Small City category – after having first won the competition in its maiden year sixty years ago. The results featuring all the finalists, listed by region/nation can be found here.

Beyond the delightful gardens and seasonal displays – including flower beds featuring 3D carpet bed bees amongst a sea of marigolds – the judges were struck by Bath’s strong emphasis on community and environment. The group showed excellent engagement with local schools, facilitating horticultural activities from planting trees to creating raised beds for edibles, as well as living roofs, bug hotels and dipping ponds. One project even involved growing wheat and milling it to produce flour before baking bread, providing pupils with first-hand experience of the plot-to-plate journey.

The group also works with It’s Your Neighbourhood groups such as More Trees for BANES, which recognises the importance of using locally harvested seeds. 11,000 trees have been planted since the project’s inception in 2008, with local school children growing on saplings in raised beds on their school grounds.

Other highlights noted by the judges were the Parade Gardens and the Bath Women’s Institute Garden, with its bench for quiet contemplation and plenty of herbs which are there to be harvested by all. The judges noted the location’s tranquillity, adding that it’s a space equally enjoyed by members of the public and the volunteers who tend to it.

Darren Share, Chair of the RHS Britain in Bloom judges, said: “Huge congratulations to all finalists of the 2024 Britain in Bloom competition, especially in this milestone 60th anniversary year. Each group demonstrated the creativity, hard work, and commitment to sustainability that Britain in Bloom has championed for six decades. It is wonderful to see the passion and dedication of these hardworking groups in bringing together communities across the UK and make a lasting impact on our local environments.”

Dame Mary Berry, RHS Ambassador, said: “Bath in Bloom won this competition 60 years ago and have done it again on their 60th anniversary. Bath is such a special place to me – I grew up there. Congratulations!”

First-time entrants Wrexham in Bloom, in Wales, won the City category and a gold medal, delighting judges with a balance of annual and perennial displays, including 20 wildflower meadows throughout the city. The group has shown great community initiative, using the Erlas Walled Garden as a centre for learning for schools and dementia groups, while elsewhere they are developing connections with the local prison.

Other winners included Forres in Bloom, Scotland, who won the Town category and impressed with outstanding bedding displays, planters and baskets throughout the town. The Wee FIBbees (the Wee Forres in Bloom bees) were cited as an outstanding example of education with schools, enabling children to grow vegetables, tender perennials and annuals. Forres demonstrated that biodiversity is at the heart of all their activities, with plans to carry out wildflower turf trials along with the grafting and distribution of heritage apple trees in Mannachie Park and around the community.

Sarah Galvin, RHS Head of National Community Programmes, said: “Bath in Bloom showed not only outstanding horticultural displays but also great dedication to their community and the environment. They were the first ever winners of the competition, 60 years ago, so it’s a great pleasure to be able to crown them champions once again in this special anniversary year. Over the past six decades Britain in Bloom has evolved from what many saw as a rural hanging basket competition to a major socio-environmental campaign that is improving villages, towns and cities across the UK.”

The winners were presented with their trophies at the RHS Britain in Bloom 2024 awards ceremony, held on Monday the 21st October in Manchester, with the overall winner unveiled to the public on BBC One’s The One Show.

Full results of the RHS Britain in Bloom 2024 UK Finals can be found here.