This is an unusual one to put in, but having just received the Centennial Supplement with the latest 'The Garden' there are a few references to alpines and rock gardens. Brent Elliott's book on the history of the Chelsea Show looks to be really fascinating. Roy Lancaster nicely mentions the Alpine Garden Society at the end of his 50 years of reminiscences of visiting the Show, and a short piece by Brent Elliott on 'Rock Gardens at Chelsea' finishes with an avant-garde Australian Garden which looks as though it might have small baobabs in it! A bit of a way from what alpine gardeners might appreciate. I rather like John Brookes comment of the 'social superiority of the RHS itself' and that it was this 'whiff of privilege' that provided the clientele for the garden designer. Alpine gardening and plantsmen now are more individual than those with the large rock gardens of the past. So this inevitably has an impact on how such plants are seen and used at Chelsea. One of the nicest pictures is of Beth Chatto and her stand in the late 1970's, and I remember being captivated by the last display she did in the '80's. Chelsea is a curious mix of the wonderful and skilled and ridiculous and over the top - and alpines can only fall into the first category.