A garden which features walls built using stone from Yell has won a gold award at the Chelsea Flower Show.
Burravoe dyker Alan Smiles transported 20 tonnes of Lewisian gneiss stone from the island to London and set about constructing the garden with his son Karl for the Motor Neurone Disease Association’s entry in the show, the ‘Hebridean Weavers’ Garden’.
Today’s gold award can be added to previous Chelsea visits which netted impressive gold and bronze awards for the charity’s design and final layouts.
Martin Anderson, associate founder of the MNDA, said: “Set in the 1950s, the garden reflects the remoteness and bleakness of the islands but also features the many wild flowers prolific in the summer months.
“The artisan imagined to be living in the Black House weaves Harris tweed using natural dyes from plant materials grown in the garden or collected from around the island.”
The stone for the old Lewis Black House façade was planned to come from the isle of Lewis but rising transport costs meant the charity was struggling to bring the garden entry in on budget.
Martin has been a regular visitor to Shetland for many years and keeps in touch with folk throughout the isles, which is how he first came up with the idea for the Shetland Croft House Garden entry which won a gold medal at Chelsea in 2008.