Bloom 2026 — The 5 Big Garden Trends to Recreate at Home in Ireland

4 jun 2026

Bloom 2026 — Ireland's largest garden festival, hosted by Bord Bia in Phoenix Park over the June bank holiday — made the direction of Irish gardening unambiguous. Five themes defined the show gardens this year: sustainability, wildlife-friendly planting, rewilding, bold naturalistic borders, and gardens designed for outdoor living. The consistent message from the show garden judging panel was the same across categories: gardens should look good, support nature, and work hard in everyday life. This guide unpacks each trend and gives you the specific Irish-suited plants to recreate the look at home.

🌿 DID YOU KNOW?

Bloom 2026 attracted approximately 110,000 visitors over the four-day festival (29 May - 1 June 2026) and featured 21 show gardens judged by an international panel. Bord Bia's stated theme this year was "Gardens that Give Back" — a deliberate framing emphasising biodiversity, climate resilience, and reduced resource consumption. The show gardens directly influence what Irish garden centres, designers, and homeowners plant in the following 12 months.

Trend 1: Sustainability — the peat-free, low-resource garden

Sustainability was the foundational thread running through almost every Bloom 2026 show garden. The Irish horticulture industry's move away from peat-based compost (driven by the All-Ireland Peatlands Action Plan), the push toward native species, and the focus on rainwater capture and reduced lawn area all featured prominently.

What it looks like in practice: Peat-free compost, native species where possible, rainwater butts, smaller lawn areas, no synthetic fertilisers, ground cover instead of bedding annuals. Bord Bia gold-medal gardens this year consistently featured Irish native species like Foxglove, Persicaria, Hedera hibernica (Irish Ivy), and native ferns instead of imported ornamentals.

Plants for a sustainable Irish garden

6x Foxglove (Digitalis purpurea) — Native Wildflower

6x Foxglove (Digitalis purpurea) — Native Wildflower

€50.95
Native ✅Bumblebee plantSelf-seeding
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24x Persicaria bistorta — Native Common Bistort

24x Persicaria bistorta — Native Common Bistort

€138.95
Native ✅Damp meadowPollinator favourite
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For a deeper dive on Irish native species and the All-Ireland Pollinator Plan framework, see our Native Plants & Pollinator-Friendly Garden Design for Ireland 2026.

Trend 2: Wildlife-friendly planting — bees, birds and butterflies first

The single most consistent visual signal across Bloom 2026 show gardens was plants selected specifically because pollinators visit them. Lavender, Salvia, Verbena bonariensis, Echinacea and ornamental thymes appeared in nearly every garden. This is the All-Ireland Pollinator Plan (AIPP) influence working at scale — the Plan's recommended-plant list has become a de facto standard for what Bord Bia gold-medal gardens look like.

What's new in 2026: Beyond standard pollinator-friendly perennials, gardens this year also featured deliberate bird-feeding planting (berries, seed-heads left standing through winter), bat-friendly trees (single specimen native trees), and "insect hotel" structures integrated into garden design rather than tacked on.

Plants for a wildlife-friendly Irish garden

6x Lavender Lavandula angustifolia — Pollinator Magnet

6x Lavender Lavandula angustifolia — Pollinator Magnet

€130.95
Bee-friendlyFragrantMid-summer
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24x Salvia nemorosa Mainacht — Violet-Blue Sage

24x Salvia nemorosa Mainacht — Violet-Blue Sage

€89.95
24 plantsBee-friendlyLong flowering
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24x Echinacea purpurea Magnus — Purple Coneflower

24x Echinacea purpurea Magnus — Purple Coneflower

€84.95
24 plantsButterfly magnetJul-Sep
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See also our Pet-Safe Plants Ireland guide if you're planning a wildlife garden in a household with cats or dogs (some pollinator-friendly plants are toxic if chewed).

Trend 3: Rewilding — letting parts of the garden be wild

Rewilding moved from fringe environmentalism to mainstream garden design at Bloom 2026. Show gardens deliberately featured "wild" corners — long grass, log piles, self-seeded perennials, native shrubs left unpruned. The aesthetic shifted noticeably away from manicured perfection toward intentional naturalism.

The principle: 10-20% of a garden left semi-wild dramatically increases biodiversity (insect species count, bird visits, pollinator forage). The 2026 show gardens demonstrated this works visually too — a clearly-defined "wild edge" frames the manicured part beautifully, the way a meadow contrasts with cultivated land.

💡 EXPERT TIP: Easiest entry to rewilding for an Irish garden: stop mowing one corner of the lawn from May to September. By August you'll have wildflowers (Self-heal, Clover, Bird's-foot Trefoil, Yarrow) that you didn't plant. Cost: €0. Biodiversity impact: significant. The All-Ireland Pollinator Plan calls this "Don't Mow, Let It Grow".

Plants for a naturalistic rewilded edge

48x Stipa tenuissima — Mexican Feather Grass

48x Stipa tenuissima — Mexican Feather Grass

€133.95
48 plantsNaturalisticMovement
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60x Geranium Rozanne — Long-Bloom Ground Cover

60x Geranium Rozanne — Long-Bloom Ground Cover

€289.95
60 plantsMay-NovWildlife host
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24x Persicaria bistorta — Native Damp-Meadow

24x Persicaria bistorta — Native Damp-Meadow

€138.95
Native ✅Self-spreadingHoverfly favourite
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Trend 4: Bold naturalistic borders — the Oudolf influence

The signature visual of Bloom 2026 was perennial-grass borders inspired by Piet Oudolf — large drifts of structural perennials intermingled with ornamental grasses, designed for year-round interest including the dried seedheads of winter. This is the style championed by High Line New York and Hauser & Wirth Somerset, now firmly established in Irish garden design.

The plant palette: Verbena bonariensis as airy purple verticals; Salvia nemorosa Mainacht for early-summer blue spikes; Echinacea purpurea for August-October colour; Geranium Rozanne flowering nearly six months; Persicaria for damp-edge interest; ornamental grasses (Stipa tenuissima for movement, Calamagrostis brachytricha for height, Pennisetum Hameln for the front edge) tying everything together with texture and motion.

The Oudolf-style border in plants

24x Verbena bonariensis Lollipop — Tall Purple Vertical

24x Verbena bonariensis Lollipop — Tall Purple Vertical

€99.95
24 plantsJul-NovButterfly plant
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Perennial Border Package Amsterdam — Curated Mix

Perennial Border Package Amsterdam — Curated Mix

€187.75
Curated set4-6 m² coverageMay-Oct blooms
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48x Stipa tenuissima — Mexican Feather Grass

48x Stipa tenuissima — Mexican Feather Grass

€133.95
48 plants40-50cmMovement
Shop Now

For the complete planting plan, see our Hedging & Perennial Borders Ireland 2026 guide — it covers the structural backbone (hedge), naturalistic body (perennials and grasses), and three sample border plans (small, medium, large).

Trend 5: Outdoor living — the garden as another room

The most decisive shift at Bloom 2026 was away from "show garden as display" toward "garden as functional outdoor room". Show gardens featured seating, dining, kitchens, fire pits, screens, edible plants, and weather shelter — designed around how the garden gets used, not just how it looks. Irish summer (and increasingly mild winters) make year-round outdoor use viable when the garden is properly designed for it.

The three design layers:

  • Structural backdrop — bamboo screening (Fargesia), tall hedging, or a pergola supporting climbers (Wisteria, Star Jasmine)
  • Statement plant — single specimen for visual anchor (Olive tree, Strelitzia, large Wisteria standard)
  • Low layer — lavender, ornamental grasses, ground cover that softens the seating edge

Plants for outdoor-living design

4x Fargesia rufa — Clumping Bamboo Screen

4x Fargesia rufa — Clumping Bamboo Screen

€105.95
4 plants2.5-3mPrivacy + texture
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2x Wisteria 'Naga Noda' — Statement Climber

2x Wisteria 'Naga Noda' — Statement Climber

€74.95
ClimberLong racemesPergola
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Olive Tree Olea europaea 100cm — Statement Anchor

Olive Tree Olea europaea 100cm — Statement Anchor

€83.95
100cmMediterraneanYear-round structure
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For the complete guide to garden privacy and outdoor-room screening, see our Garden Screening & Privacy Plants Ireland 2026.

How to recreate a Bloom 2026 garden — the synthesis

Most homeowners don't need to recreate an entire show garden. The Bloom 2026 principles work at any scale — a 3-metre balcony, a 10-metre courtyard, a 200-square-metre back garden. The order of work for an existing garden:

Step What Why
1. Reduce lawn area Convert 30-50% of lawn to perennial border / wild edge / shrub planting Lower maintenance, more biodiversity, more visual interest year-round
2. Plant the backbone first Hedge or bamboo screen along boundaries; small tree as focal point Permanent structure that takes time to establish — do this before everything else
3. Add a naturalistic border Perennials + grasses, intermingled, in drifts of 3-5-7 plants The Oudolf-style border is the heart of the Bloom 2026 look
4. Reserve a "wild corner" 10-20% of garden left to develop naturally — long grass, log pile, self-seeders Biggest single biodiversity action you can take
5. Design the seating Where you actually want to sit/eat/work outside — plant the screening and softening around it Garden-as-room thinking — design around use, not display
💡 BUDGET-AWARE TIP: A full Bloom 2026-style border (6m × 1m) costs ~€600-€800 in plants if bought as established stock. The same border bought as smaller plug plants would be 40-50% less but takes an extra growing season to fill in. For typical Irish gardens, the Perennial Border Package Amsterdam (~€188) is the cheapest starting point — a curated mix of border perennials ready for a 4-6 square metre bed.

Recreate Bloom 2026 at Home

Free delivery to Ireland and 24 EU countries on perennial borders, clumping bamboo, climbers, and native species — all in stock.

Shop Landscaping Plants →

Frequently asked questions

What were the main garden trends at Bloom 2026?
Bloom 2026 was defined by five major themes: sustainability (peat-free, low-resource gardening), wildlife-friendly planting (pollinators, birds, biodiversity), rewilding (leaving parts of the garden naturalistic), bold naturalistic borders (Piet Oudolf-style perennial waves intermingled with grasses), and gardens designed for outdoor living (garden-as-room with seating, screening and edible elements). The consistent message: gardens should look good, support nature, and work hard in everyday life.
What is a naturalistic border?
A naturalistic border (often Piet Oudolf-style) uses drifts of perennials and ornamental grasses intermingled rather than tidy rows. Plants are chosen for year-round structure including seedheads in winter. Typical species: Verbena bonariensis, Echinacea purpurea, Salvia nemorosa, Geranium Rozanne, Stipa tenuissima, Calamagrostis brachytricha, Persicaria bistorta. The effect is loose, meadow-like, and supportive of pollinators.
How do I make my Irish garden more wildlife-friendly?
Four high-impact actions: (1) plant native species (Foxglove, Persicaria, Wild Thyme, Bugle, Hawthorn hedgerow); (2) leave a corner of lawn unmown May-August (No Mow May); (3) stop using pesticides and herbicides; (4) add a small water feature or pond. The All-Ireland Pollinator Plan publishes detailed garden-action guides at pollinators.ie.
What is rewilding in a garden context?
Garden-scale rewilding means allowing parts of the garden to develop with minimal human intervention — long grass corners, log piles, native shrubs left unpruned, self-seeded perennials allowed to colonise. The goal is biodiversity rather than tidiness. Even 10-20% of a small garden left naturalistic significantly increases insect and bird life, per Irish biodiversity research.
What plants work best for a garden-as-outdoor-room design?
Three layers: (1) structural backdrop — clumping bamboo (Fargesia) or Wisteria pergola for vertical screening and privacy; (2) feature plant — Olive tree, Strelitzia, or a Wisteria standard for visual anchor; (3) low layer — lavender, ornamental grasses, and ground cover plants softening the seating edge. The principle: design the planting around where you actually sit, eat, and entertain.
Is the Bloom 2026 style suitable for small Irish gardens?
Yes — most Bloom themes scale down. Naturalistic borders work brilliantly in 3-6 metre stretches. Rewilding can mean as little as a single 2m corner. Outdoor-living designs work in courtyards as small as 4×4 metres. The Bord Bia 'pollinator-friendly small garden' show gardens at Bloom 2026 specifically showcased designs under 30 square metres.
When is the best time to plant a Bloom-inspired garden in Ireland?
September to November is optimal — warm autumn soil and reliable rainfall help perennials and shrubs establish before winter. March to May is the second window. Container-grown plants (which is what we ship) can be planted any frost-free month, but autumn-planted gardens outperform spring-planted equivalents by an entire growing season.
What is Bloom Festival?
Bloom is Ireland's largest garden, food and family festival, hosted annually by Bord Bia in Phoenix Park, Dublin over the early June bank holiday weekend. It features over 20 show gardens, hundreds of horticultural exhibitors, and signals the cultural direction of Irish gardening for the coming year. Bloom 2026 ran 29 May - 1 June and attracted approximately 110,000 visitors.

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