Influencers spend 12 days on Moana-themed garden

News imageBBC A mother and daughter sitting in the garden.
The six-year-old girl is sitting on the left and has two plaits in her hair. The mum is on the right. She has her hair in a ponytail and is wearing a white top. BBC
Millie, 6, visited the garden with her mum Louise Farr and said she loved it

Green-fingered influencers said they will never forget the moment they revealed a Moana-themed garden to children at a hospice.

The Green Genie brothers, Jake and Ethan Thorne, had just 12 days to build the garden at Little Haven's Hospice in Benfleet, Essex, thanks to funding from Walt Disney Company UK and Ireland.

The pair have one million followers on Instagram and build luxury landscapes that can take them months to complete.

Jake Thorne, said: "In all the years we've built gardens together, that one moment we will never forget, seeing those children's faces when they walked through here - it was a very emotional day for us."

News imageTwo men both wearing t-shirts smiling at the camera. Behind them is a play area.
(L-R) Ethan and Jake Thorne are popular landscapers on Instagram

The brothers had two days to plan and prepare the project, which turned the garden from an area that originally just contained swings, into an oasis-inspired beach.

Among the first to experience the garden was six-year-old Millie, who has been supported by the hospice since 2021.

Millie was one when she was diagnosed with the muscle disorder, Congenital Myopathy.

While speaking to BBC Look East, she said: "I love that I can drive around the garden in my wheelchair."

The new live-action film adaptation of Disney's Moana was released on 10 July and the garden opened to the children not long before that.

News imageJonny Michel A Moana themed garden with a Moana sign and lots of benches and greenery and two thatch-covered areas in the background.Jonny Michel
The live-action Moana film was officially released in cinemas on 10 July, 2026

The hospice cares for babies, children, and young people up to the age of 25 who are living with complex or incurable conditions.

Little Havens gets 80% of its income from public donations and all of that goes into the children's care.

News imageCharlotte Rose/BBC A woman wearing a green dress with a white, orange and yellow scarf around her neck.
She is smiling while sitting on the bench in the garden.Charlotte Rose/BBC
Louise Bryan, CEO for Havens Hospices in Benfleet, Essex, said she thought the call from Disney was a prank call.

Louise Bryan, CEO for Havens Hospices said she thought the call from Walt Disney was a prank, but jumped at the chance once she was certain it wasn't a joke.

She said: "It was something we couldn't afford ourselves.

"The children are so excited by it - it means so much to them to have a space just for them."

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