The Prague Post - AI talking trees feature at Chelsea Flower Show

EUR -
AED 4.274473
AFN 79.636887
ALL 97.300552
AMD 443.961839
ANG 2.083154
AOA 1067.308862
ARS 1578.281176
AUD 1.792016
AWG 2.095045
AZN 1.978204
BAM 1.953432
BBD 2.343779
BDT 141.808103
BGN 1.954864
BHD 0.438917
BIF 3469.043924
BMD 1.163914
BND 1.495751
BOB 8.066222
BRL 6.323427
BSD 1.163085
BTN 101.915709
BWP 15.617009
BYN 3.94302
BYR 22812.716913
BZD 2.339124
CAD 1.61006
CDF 3337.526727
CHF 0.93549
CLF 0.028677
CLP 1124.981152
CNY 8.325362
CNH 8.326938
COP 4719.81146
CRC 586.109673
CUC 1.163914
CUP 30.843724
CVE 110.717287
CZK 24.525415
DJF 206.85084
DKK 7.464542
DOP 73.268219
DZD 151.243686
EGP 56.563202
ERN 17.458712
ETB 164.689912
FJD 2.633935
FKP 0.862856
GBP 0.8637
GEL 3.136764
GGP 0.862856
GHS 12.977457
GIP 0.862856
GMD 83.214873
GNF 10103.939095
GTQ 8.915193
GYD 243.235156
HKD 9.072234
HNL 30.75017
HRK 7.534488
HTG 152.192054
HUF 396.184529
IDR 18982.217321
ILS 3.900335
IMP 0.862856
INR 102.004212
IQD 1524.727508
IRR 48942.588606
ISK 143.207871
JEP 0.862856
JMD 186.23545
JOD 0.825225
JPY 171.622651
KES 150.728612
KGS 101.755541
KHR 4661.476466
KMF 492.62661
KPW 1047.500277
KRW 1625.034052
KWD 0.355727
KYD 0.969225
KZT 621.99603
LAK 25163.823242
LBP 104237.237889
LKR 351.424011
LRD 235.139779
LSL 20.520119
LTL 3.436736
LVL 0.70404
LYD 6.296779
MAD 10.525231
MDL 19.412469
MGA 5191.057259
MKD 61.510116
MMK 2443.291516
MNT 4187.530506
MOP 9.345671
MRU 46.498742
MUR 53.505584
MVR 17.935688
MWK 2020.554659
MXN 21.723754
MYR 4.908804
MZN 74.432472
NAD 20.519703
NGN 1789.226638
NIO 42.829265
NOK 11.789516
NPR 163.07393
NZD 1.986659
OMR 0.447547
PAB 1.16309
PEN 4.097058
PGK 4.825297
PHP 66.383881
PKR 328.078293
PLN 4.259115
PYG 8417.868364
QAR 4.237521
RON 5.057788
RSD 117.1782
RUB 93.699527
RWF 1683.019829
SAR 4.367221
SBD 9.563959
SCR 16.446841
SDG 698.925034
SEK 11.129004
SGD 1.496276
SHP 0.914654
SLE 27.060979
SLL 24406.694949
SOS 665.175049
SRD 44.606427
STD 24090.67252
STN 24.471388
SVC 10.176446
SYP 15133.596084
SZL 20.519645
THB 37.757314
TJS 11.1366
TMT 4.073699
TND 3.35792
TOP 2.726004
TRY 47.769941
TTD 7.902421
TWD 35.573757
TZS 2937.949728
UAH 48.1458
UGX 4143.97676
USD 1.163914
UYU 46.513617
UZS 14374.339367
VES 164.818347
VND 30686.59599
VUV 138.561986
WST 3.115356
XAF 655.202183
XAG 0.030114
XAU 0.000343
XCD 3.145536
XCG 2.096159
XDR 0.814844
XOF 652.956021
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.543092
ZAR 20.521372
ZMK 10476.622824
ZMW 27.133643
ZWL 374.779874
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    75.55

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.1500

    23.87

    -0.63%

  • RYCEF

    0.1400

    14.34

    +0.98%

  • SCS

    0.2300

    16.62

    +1.38%

  • NGG

    0.5500

    71.04

    +0.77%

  • RIO

    -0.3800

    61.95

    -0.61%

  • BTI

    -0.4700

    57.33

    -0.82%

  • CMSC

    0.0620

    23.862

    +0.26%

  • BCC

    -1.1300

    88.85

    -1.27%

  • RELX

    0.0700

    47.86

    +0.15%

  • AZN

    0.3900

    80.05

    +0.49%

  • GSK

    0.1900

    39.83

    +0.48%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    13.36

    -0.52%

  • BCE

    -0.3200

    24.9

    -1.29%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    11.86

    -0.08%

  • BP

    -0.3000

    34.67

    -0.87%

AI talking trees feature at Chelsea Flower Show
AI talking trees feature at Chelsea Flower Show / Photo: Adrian Dennis - AFP

AI talking trees feature at Chelsea Flower Show

Talking trees powered by AI, drought-resistant crops and sweet potatoes sprouting among flowers -- the prestigious Chelsea Flower Show is facing the future with a focus on innovation and climate-change adaptation.

Text size:

Over five days starting Tuesday, more than 140,000 visitors are expected to view what the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) bills as "the pinnacle of horticultural excellence".

There are stunning gardens, 30 competing for top awards, and more than 400 exhibitors showcasing their gardening knowledge and carefully-cultivated plants to the public and champagne-sipping VIPs.

King Charles III was to visit Monday with Queen Camilla, with an eye on the show's first ever dog garden, designed by celebrity gardener Monty Don.

The head of state was also expected to visit the Wildlife Trusts' British Rainforests garden where the main attraction is a 50-year-old fern that once thrived in the Great Park of Windsor.

The garden was "inspired by the enchanted forests of Arthurian legend" and it "rekindles the wild and wet woodlands that once swathed vast landscapes along the west coast".

- Intelligent Garden -

In the Intelligent Garden, plant-lovers can truly talk to the trees thanks to artificial intelligence.

Pioneering AI sensors called Treetalk have been installed to give updates on the trees' needs in urban environments, whether they are under stress and how to care for them.

"Urban trees filter air pollution, cool the air, support wildlife, and boost community wellbeing. Yet, they face immense challenges," the RHS said about the garden designed by Tom Massey and architect Je Ahn.

About 50 percent of urban trees do not survive beyond 10 years and up to 30 percent die in their first year, it added.

"The use of AI is not going to replace a human being, our intuition and our labour. It's still the core and heart of this garden," said Je Ahn.

But data could give "a clearer picture of what's going on around us".

- 'Challenging conditions' -

The plants on display in the Garden of the Future "have the ability to survive in a range of challenging conditions," the designers told the RHS.

Growing among the more common hawthorn bushes, are sweet potatoes which have "fantastic nutritional value and are drought resistant," sorghum a popular cereal from Africa, rock roses and chickpeas that are "more resilient to warmer climates", they said.

Those are all crops that "can grow right here in the UK", said Ana Maria Loboguerrero, the Gates Foundation's director of adaptive and equitable food systems.

It is the first time the foundation has sponsored a garden at the show.

Designers Matthew Butler and Josh Parker said the show was a chance to reflect on "the future of crops, food and livelihoods in the face of climate change".

The theme of sustainability is echoed across the show, including in the Seawilding garden inspired by the landscape around Loch Craignish, on the west coast of Scotland.

It includes a saltwater pool, planted with seagrass -- the first time that it has ever been displayed at the show and the UK's "only native flowering plant in the ocean," the RHS says.

Designer Ryan McMahon said he "always assumed seagrass grew in warmer climates" so was intrigued when he discovered it in Scotland.

There is also a garden called "Songbird Survival" amid reports bird numbers have fallen in UK gardens by 50 percent in the past two generations.

Or visitors can discover the "Making Life Better with Bees" garden, with insects key to pollination.

The annual horticultural show is organised in the grounds of the Royal Chelsea Hospital, and has long championed environmental issues.

In 2021, the RHS it said it would ban the use of peat, a natural captor of CO2 one of the main greenhouse gases blamed for global warming, from the end of 2025.

But growers will be able until 2028 to continue using peat, an organic material made over thousands of years from decaying vegetation in the UK's dwindling wetlands.

The RHS decided to push back the peat ban for growers "due to a complex horticultural supply chain where 60 percent of young plants, many grown in peat, are sourced from abroad".

E.Cerny--TPP