Cross bed

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Television broadcast
Original title Cross bed
Country of production Germany
Year (s) since 1994
Production
company
Bavarian radio
length 30 minutes
Broadcasting
cycle
biweekly
genre Information : garden , plants , advice
Theme music Serenade No. 2, A major, Opus 16 by Johannes Brahms , arranged by Ferran Cruixent
(since 1998 in the Cruixent version)
idea Burkhard Mücke
Moderation Sabrina Nitsche
First broadcast January 18, 1998 on Bavarian TV

Querbeet (until May 2010 also Querbeet through the gardening year ) is a television broadcast by Bavarian Radio with contributions on the subjects of flowers, plants and gardens.

Shipment info

BR-Querbeetgarten (1994–2011) and Querbeetstudio in Lower Bavaria
Querbeetnutzgarten (2003)
Cold frame in the cross-bed garden
Cross-bed small greenhouse
Querbeet winter garden (2009)
The new cross-bed garden (2019)

The program is broadcast every second Monday alternating with the environmental magazine “Weeds” at 7 p.m. on BR TV . The ARD publishes the current broadcast dates of Querbeet on its homepage together with the broadcast dates for other ARD garden programs under the heading Home and Garden .

Concept and content

Private production 1994

The format was developed by Burkhard Mücke (idea / project management) and the biologist John A. Ferguson (main author) and freely produced outside of Bavarian Radio from 1994 to 1998 and broadcast on BR television and in the third programs of several ARD stations. A pilot program was broadcast on Sunday, September 18, 1994 in the afternoon at 4 p.m. on Bavarian television. The basis and template for the series was the 45-minute feature produced by Ferguson / Mücke with the title “The show can begin” on the occasion of the International Horticultural Exhibition (IGA 83) in Munich. The film, broadcast by ARD on April 28, 1983, was viewed by 5 million viewers.

BR production 1998

In 1998 the BR acquired the broadcast format Querbeet while retaining its logo and title , established the broadcast , which was declared in the credits as "Burkhard Mücke's broadcast", at a fixed prime time slot on Bavarian television and broadcasted Querbeet for the first time on January 18, 1998. In 2008, Querbeet was the most successful garden show on German television, with over 1.5 million viewers nationwide. In 2014 the average market share of Querbeet decreased compared to 2013, from 15% to 13.8%. In 2015, more viewers saw the show again, the market share was 15.1%.

Moderators and experts

Until April 2016, the program did without the continuous moderation that is usual for advice programs. Instead, gardening and plant experts led the show as sub-moderators. One of the most striking protagonists, who participated in 232 programs, was the medical historian and phythopharmacologist Christa Habrich , who also played a key role in the development of the series. Maria Sansoni, who appeared as an expert on Mediterranean potted plants in the program from the very first broadcast, and Cornelia Augustin, who brought the perennial topic closer to viewers in her nursery in Effeltrich, Upper Franconia, were also involved in the development of the broadcast format . Master chef Gregor Wittmann, a student of Alfons Schuhbeck , created the Querbeet garden kitchen in his restaurant kitchen in Walting near Eichstätt in 2001 . In April 2016, the program was shortened from 45 minutes to 30 minutes. Since then, the trained gardener Sabrina Nitsche has moderated the program. The editor-in-chief of Querbeet is Christine Peters.

Cross-bed garden

The practical garden themes were staged and filmed in the Querbeet garden from 1994 to 2010 . The Querbeetgarten consisted of a spacious kitchen garden with fruit and vegetables, a wild garden for bees and butterflies, a small greenhouse, several cold frames, and a spacious winter garden, all of this in a listed farm in the Lower Bavarian Rottal . The Querbeet studio, equipped with appropriate tv technology, was also located in the four-sided courtyard , in which the broadcast format was developed by John A. Ferguson and Burkhard Mücke and the individual programs were developed by them for 14 years until they moved from BR to 2010 shared Querbeetstudio in Munich were designed and implemented. The winter garden was built from the indestructible pitch pine wood of the Bavarian broadcasting tower in Munich-Ismaning, which was blown up in 1983. Since 2011 advice topics have been discussed in a garden in Munich-Freimann, financed by the Bavarian Broadcasting Corporation.

gardens of the World

A defining element of the broadcast format and from the first broadcast onwards were garden portraits under the heading “Gardens of the World” until April 2016. At the end of the program, gardens in Germany and Europe, botanical gardens, but also private and historical gardens in Italy, Holland, Austria, Great Britain, Scotland, France, the Czech Republic, Poland, California and Japan were shown. Portraits of 194 "Gardens of the World" that were broadcast in Querbeet over the course of the first 16 years can be found on the Querbeet homepage in the web archive .

Theme music by Johannes Brahms

The unmistakable element of the show from 1994 to 2016 was the trailer music, a sequence of the fifth movement of Serenade No. 2 in A major from Opus 16 by Johannes Brahms , which served as the musical prelude to the show from 1994 to October 2007 in Brahm's original version . In 2007 John A. Ferguson and Burkhard Mücke commissioned the Spanish composer Ferran Cruixent , who was then working at the National Theater in Munich , to compose a new trailer music entitled “Querbeetissimo” based on the Brahms model. The musicians of the Radio Symphony Orchestra Bratislava rehearsed trailer was until April 2016 in generally broadcast and is still earlier in the regularly broadcast repeats shipments under the label Querbeet Classix the hallmark of Querbeet . From 2007 to 2014, the BR posted the 23-second opening trailer of the program for free download on the Querbeethomepage. The somewhat more voluminous final trailer is 47 seconds long.

Querbeet -Openingtrailer / 23 s


Querbeet final trailer / 47 p

Cross border extras

So-called cross- bed extras are broadcast at irregular intervals . They are extensively devoted to a single topic.

Awards

In 2008 the German Society for Garden Art and Landscape Culture (DGGL) awarded the inventor and project manager of the Querbeet broadcast format , Burkhard Mücke, the “DGGL Culture Prize for outstanding achievements in the field of garden art and landscape culture” for the idea and design of his program. The golden linden leaf is a visible sign of the culture award. The main author of the program, the biologist and botanist John A. Ferguson, was also awarded the DGGL Culture Prize, as was the editor, Udo A. Zimmermann, who represented the station.
The Querbeet author Maria Sansoni was a. a. Awarded the Weihenstephan Hans Bickel Prize in 2010 for her journalistic activities in the context of the program and in the Querbeet books.

Companion books, DVD, VHS

In 1998, the BR published a 360-minute video guide through the entire gardening year, three video cassettes, each 90 minutes long, with tips for the seasons spring, summer and autumn. In 2005 the BR published a sales DVD entitled From IGA to BUGA with two half-hour films broadcast as part of Querbeet about the International Horticultural Exhibition (IGA 83) in Munich and the Federal Garden Show 2005 in Munich. From 2007 to 2016 9 accompanying books were published for the show, the first at Bayerischer Obst- und Gartenbauverlag, 8 books at AV-Buch and Cadmosverlag, which ended its collaboration with Querbeet in 2016 . The basis and template for the first five accompanying books based on the phenological garden calendar created by John A. Ferguson is the garden phenological standard work The Garden of the Ten Seasons , published in 1987 , in which experiences from the science of phenology are detailed for the first time in an enclosed leaflet with the title Natural garden calendar have been implemented in horticultural practice.

Web links

Commons : Querbeetgarten  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Querbeet-Pflanzenlexikon, BR-Homepage, accessed on December 6, 2014 ( Memento from August 31, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
  2. Querbeet-Innenhof BR homepage, accessed on August 8, 2015 ( Memento from January 17, 2008 in the Internet Archive )
  3. A new garden for the program Querbeet. br.de, August 17, 2018, accessed on November 29, 2018 .
  4. Broadcasting date in ARD / Heim und Garten. ARD, October 8, 2015, accessed October 8, 2015 .
  5. Most successful gardening program on German television, accessed on December 3, 2018 ( Memento from December 30, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
  6. 20 years of Querbeet, for “PR reasons”, accessed on October 20, 2014
  7. a b Klaus-Henning von Krosigk: Laudation on the occasion of the 2008 culture award ceremony to John A. Ferguson, Burkhard Mücke and Udo Zimmermann on Friday, November 7th, 2008 in Nymphenburg Palace. (PDF; 22.2 kB) German Society for Garden Art and Landscape Culture e. V., October 2008, accessed October 9, 2015 .
  8. a b c d DVD From the IGA to the BUGA - Munich's big garden shows. 2005, ISBN 3-9810283-2-5 .
  9. ^ BR homepage: "A broadcast from Burkhard Mücke", accessed on December 3, 2018 ( Memento from December 30, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
  10. 2008 1.5 million viewers, BR homepage, accessed December 6, 2014 ( Memento from August 2, 2009 in the Internet Archive )
  11. ^ BR balance sheet 2014, accessed on January 5, 2015
  12. TV usage: Balance sheet Bayerisches Fernsehen 2015. Bayerischer Rundfunk, December 30, 2015, accessed on February 19, 2016 .
  13. "Our experts", updated, accessed on November 21, 2014 ( Memento from April 25, 2009 in the Internet Archive )
  14. Marion Maria Ruisinger (ed.): Exhibition for Chr. Habrich: Querbeet - Botany, Art and Culture , Ingolstadt 2010, ISSN  0172-3863
  15. ↑ Recipe collection from Querbeetküche ( Memento from February 11, 2008 in the Internet Archive )
  16. Recipes 2009–2011 by G. Wittmann, accessed on March 9, 2016 ( Memento from July 13, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
  17. Querbeet: The garden broadcast. Bayerischer Rundfunk, April 12, 2016, accessed on September 15, 2016 .
  18. Bavarian television program calendar, preview Querbeet. br.de, accessed on July 12, 2018 .
  19. Querbeet-Wildgarten BR homepage, accessed on November 22, 2018 ( Memento from November 2, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
  20. Culture in the cold frame, renaissance of an old gardening culture BR homepage, accessed on November 29, 2018 ( Memento from November 24, 2001 in the Internet Archive )
  21. Querbeetwintergarten BR homepage, accessed on July 21, 2019 ( Memento from January 23, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
  22. Querbeet-Innenhof BR homepage, accessed on November 22, 2018 ( Memento from January 17, 2008 in the Internet Archive )
  23. Jump up a landmark - the Ismaninger wooden broadcast tower. br.de, accessed on November 28, 2018 .
  24. The Querbeetgarten - Place to Experiment, BR homepage, accessed on September 5, 2016 ( Memento from January 17, 2008 in the Internet Archive )
  25. The Querbeetgarten - From the meadow to the garden, BR homepage, accessed on August 5, 2018 ( Memento from April 10, 2016 in the Internet Archive )
  26. List of "Gardens of the World" in Querbeet, BR-Homepage, accessed on February 4, 2016 ( Memento from August 29, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
  27. ^ Gardens of the World, Memory of California Gardens by Dr. John A. Ferguson, Homepage Querbeet, accessed on December 6, 2016 ( Memento from January 17, 2008 in the Internet Archive )
  28. ^ "Gardens of the World" in Querbeet, BR homepage, accessed on December 6, 2014 ( Memento from November 8, 2010 in the Internet Archive )
  29. 194 Gardens of the World from the Querbeet homepage, accessed on December 10, 2015 ( Memento from December 30, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
  30. Bavarian television program calendar, preview Querbeet. br.de, accessed on September 7, 2019 .
  31. Ringtone for downloading in br.de, accessed on February 11, 2015 ( Memento from April 14, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
  32. Der Querbeetgarten in BR.de, accessed on September 17, 2014 ( Memento from January 17, 2008 in the Internet Archive )
  33. ^ "What remained of the IGA 83" , Querbeet homepage on BR.de, accessed on April 19, 2015 ( Memento from January 17, 2008 in the Internet Archive )
  34. La Mortella in BR.de, accessed on October 23, 2014 ( Memento from October 18, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
  35. Blooming Breslau on BR.de, accessed on September 17, 2014 ( Memento from May 5, 2010 in the Internet Archive )
  36. BUGA 2005 Resumee on BR.de, accessed on September 17, 2017 ( Memento from November 2, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
  37. Klostergärtnerei Gars on BR.de, accessed on September 17, 2017 ( Memento from December 13, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
  38. Gardens in Cornwall on BR.de, accessed on December 20, 2014 ( Memento from January 17, 2008 in the Internet Archive )
  39. Blumenreich Mariens on BR.de, accessed on March 27, 2015 ( Memento from January 10, 2008 in the Internet Archive )
  40. Wisley Garden / new on BR.de, accessed on December 20, 2014 ( Memento from January 17, 2008 in the Internet Archive )
  41. Garden paradises in Lombardy on BR.de, accessed on August 20, 2015 ( Memento from January 17, 2008 in the Internet Archive )
  42. ^ The last little garden, on BR.de, accessed on April 12, 2015 ( Memento from December 9, 2004 in the Internet Archive )
  43. Vatican Gardens on BR.de, accessed on October 7, 2014 ( Memento from March 13, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
  44. Botanical Garden on BR.de, accessed on October 7, 2014 ( Memento from October 16, 2008 in the Internet Archive )
  45. Gardens in Spain in ardmediathek.de, accessed on September 17, 2017 ( Memento of the original from September 17, 2017 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.ardmediathek.de
  46. Gardens in Mallorca, accessed on January 31, 2017
  47. DGGL Culture Prize. German Society for Garden Art and Landscape Culture e. V., accessed October 8, 2015 .
  48. ^ "Goldenes Lindenblatt der DGGL" - Awarding of the 2008 Culture Prize. German Society for Garden Art and Landscape Culture e. V., 2008, accessed October 9, 2015 .
  49. Oscar of horticulture for Querbeet author. Merkur-online, July 19, 2010, accessed October 8, 2015 .
  50. autumn. (= Cross bed through the garden year. 3). 1998, ISBN 3-86148-403-7 .
  51. Burkhard Mücke, JA Ferguson: Querbeet through the garden year . The great BR garden book . Obst- und Gartenbauverlag, Munich 2007, ISBN 978-3-87596-121-8 .
  52. ^ Burkhard Mücke: The large BR garden book. 2008, ISBN 978-3-7040-2314-8 .
  53. ^ Burkhard Mücke: Querbeet through the garden year . Volume 2, 2009, ISBN 978-3-7040-2363-6 .
  54. Bayerischer Rundfunk (ed.); various authors: The great garden yearbook . 2011, ISBN 978-3-8404-7504-7 .
  55. Tobias Bode et al.: Querbeet 2016 . tape 7 . avBook published by Cadmos Verlag, Schwarzenbek 2015, ISBN 978-3-8404-7544-3 , p. 176 .
  56. Tobias Bode and others: Querbeet: No space - still garden . avBook published by Cadmos Verlag, Schwarzenbek 2016, ISBN 978-3-8404-7555-9 , p. 128 .
  57. Burkhard Mücke, John A. Ferguson: The garden of the ten seasons / The natural garden calendar . Ehrenwirth Verlag, Munich 1987, ISBN 3-431-02928-0 .