
The Young Horticulturist of the Year Competition
Information on, and how to take part in, the leading competition for any horticulturist under 30.

The Young Horticulturist of the Year competition is a fantastic opportunity to test your knowledge and get the opportunity to meet with fellow horticulturists from all over the UK and Ireland.
The competition is free to enter.
The competition is open to anyone working or studying in horticulture, anywhere in the UK or Ireland, who will be below the age of 30 on 31st July in the year of entering.
With a prize fund of £8,000, there are opportunities to win prizes across the competition. The ultimate winner of the competition wins a £2,500 travel bursary to fund horticultural related travel anywhere in the world.
If you wish to enter the competition but have accessibility requirements, please email yhoy@horticulture.org.uk before entering Round 1, and one of our YHOY Team will contact you directly to discuss reasonable adjustments.
Entries for the 2025 competition are now closed, good luck to all this year’s entrants.
The Grand Final will be taking place at Hillsborough Castle & Gardens, nr Belfast, Northern Ireland on Saturday 10th May 2025. The eight Grand Finalists will receive an expenses paid trip to the Grand Final*.
View the Round 1 Q&A's 2024
The Young Horticulturist of the Year competition is a great training resource. If you entered, view the Round 1 questions and answers from 2024 here and see how you did. Or if you’re thinking of entering next year or just want to test your knowledge – here they are!
View the recording from the 2024 Grand Final of the Young Horticulturist of the Year competition, held at Hestercombe House & Gardens, Taunton on Thursday 9th May, by clicking on the video, above.
YHOY Grand Final 2025
Meet this year’s Grand Finalists
Eastern – Charlotte Hayden
Representing Eastern district, Charlotte Hayden is a Trainee Gardener under the Historic and Botanic Garden Training Programme (HBGTP), placed at Audley End House and Gardens.
“As a gardener, I love experiencing the seasonality of the garden I work in and the opportunity to familiarise myself with its plant collection as well as the wildlife that inhabit it.
As I progress in my career, I hope to learn more about how gardeners can conserve historic gardens and the ecosystems they support, considering the effects of climate change. As I move on from the HBGTP in August, I hope to progress to another training opportunity to continue building my skillset and knowledge within the context of a different garden, and with new plants to learn from.”
West Midlands & South Wales – George Gaia Holmes
Introducing the West Midlands & South Wales representative for this year’s Young Horticulturist of the Year competition Grand Final – George Gaia Holmes!
George is currently employed as Garden/Kitchen Garden Lead at a Cotswolds private estate where he has developed a real passion especially for organic kitchen gardening.
“There’s something so satisfying about growing your own food and working with nature every step of the way. These days, I feel most myself when I’m out in the garden, getting my hands dirty. I’m constantly learning, always curious, and endlessly inspired by the way plants quietly shape the world.
I’m so grateful to be part of YHOY and I honestly wish the best of luck to everyone involved – we’re all connected by the same love for something real and beautiful.”
Northern – Otto Speight
Otto Speight is the Northern Finalist at this year’s Young Horticulturist of the Year competition Grand Final. He is horticulturist on the Floral team at RHS Garden Harlow Carr, a role he took on after graduating from the RHS apprenticeship last year.
“My passion lies in ecological design. I am particularly obsessed with British native ferns, their identification, conservation and cultivation. I also have a deep love for alpine gardening and propagation.
I aspire to become a full-time ecological garden designer, working in both private and public gardens while establishing my own design agency. I also hope to contribute to wild plant conservation through work and volunteering.”
North West & North Wales – Matthew Thurgood
Representing the North West and North Wales, Matthew Thurgood is a Craft Gardener with Leeds City Council’s Parks and Countryside department. He began gardening as an apprentice for the Council in 2023 and now has a permanent role tending to ornamental gardens, amenity greenspaces and woodlands in the city’s parks.
“More than anything, I love the potential gardens have for connecting people – both to one another and to nature – and I like to see horticulture as not just a field of work, but a method for a better way of living. Gardening has quickly taken over every aspect of my own life and I now spend most of my spare time pottering about the allotment and talking about apple trees.”
Scotland – Frank Cooke
Frank Cooke is Scotland’s representative for this year’s YHoY Grand Final. He is a 1st year Horticulture (Plantsmanship) student at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh and Scotland’s Rural College.
“I am particularly interested in plant biodiversity and taxonomy, especially of tropical plants. As well as being a student, I also volunteer as a glasshouse horticulturist working with the tropical Ericaceae collection at RBGE.”
South East – Anja Seymour
Anja Seymour is the South East region finalist at this year’s Young Horticulturist of the Year Competition Grand Final. Anja is a Diploma student and Botanical Horticulturist at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, she will be graduating from the Kew Diploma this year.
“Working at Kew has given me the opportunity to broaden my horticultural horizons even further, and I have developed a passion for working with tropical plants, particularly palms. I have recently been offered a role in the Tropical Nursery at Kew, supporting the propagation of all species in the Palm House, for the upcoming restoration project and I’m really excited to be joining the team.”
Ireland – Sarah Simpson
Introducing the Ireland representative for this year’s Young Horticulturist of the Year competition Grand Final – Sarah Simpson!
Sarah is a horticulture technician in the college in the National Botanic Gardens, Dublin. They are also studying part time for their Bachelor of Science in Horticulture which they will graduate from SETU next year.
“The area of horticulture I am most interested in is sustainable and ecologically conscious landscape design, which combines two great passions of mine, being creative and looking for bugs!
I competed in the Grand Final of the Young horticulturist of the Year competition in 2022, and this being the final year before I age out of the competition, I said I would throw my hat in the ring once more.”
Wishing all of this year’s finalists the best of luck at the Grand Final on Saturday 10th May at Hillsborough Castle and Gardens.

The Order of Play for the Grand Final can be found below. Please note, this event is by invitation only. Should you wish to attend, please contact the Secretariat by Friday 25th April 2025 to check for available spaces. Please note, we aim to record this year’s final and make the recording available after the event.

Find out more about the competition
About the Competition
The first recorded national final was held in 1990 at Writtle College in Essex. The competition could not exist without the Shropshire Horticultural Society (SHS) who organise the fantastic Shrewsbury Flower show every year. The SHS fund a large proportion of the competition and in particular the £2,500 travel bursary awarded to the winner each year.
The funds come from a trust set up in honour of Percy Thrower. Percy was known to many as the first ever celebrity gardener and is recognised for his time on BBC Gardeners World from 1969 to 1976.
Round 1
Round 1 takes place in February and consists of a multitude of question types (multiple choice, match the answer, true or false etc), covering a wide range of horticultural topics. Round 1 is held on-line. Competitors will be able to take part in Round 1 between 1st – 28th February.
Regional finals
Regional finals will be physical events, taking place in March.
Each regional final awards 1st place with £150, 2nd place receives £100 and 3rd place £75. The winners of each regional final progress on to the grand final.
The Final
The format of the Grand Final will consist of questions covering all sections of horticulture. The winner of the Final receives the £2,500 Percy Thrower Travel Bursary, provided by the Shropshire Horticultural Society & the Percy Thrower Trust, to fund a horticultural trip anywhere in the world. Second place winner goes home with £950, 3rd with £550 and the rest of the runners up all receive £200, all to be used in any way they wish.
Each of the finalists is also awarded membership to the Chartered Institute of Horticulture and PlantNetwork.
Previous winners have visited Borneo, China, New Zealand, South Africa, the Himalayas, and the Galapagos Islands to name just a few!
Sponsors
We are very privileged to have the continued support of the Shropshire Horticultural Society / Percy Thrower Trust as our main sponsors, and Bord Bia that supports the competition in Ireland.
There are also a large number of other Regional sponsors that help to make the competition worthwhile for all concerned.
If you are interested in sponsoring the 2025 competition, please contact the Chartered Institute of Horticulture – Email: cih@horticulture.org.uk