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Wildlife Garden

The Wildlife Garden is open from 1 April to 31 October. Select the images below to see some of the highlights.

Visitors are welcome at other times by appointment. Please contact the Central Hall information desk or call the wildlife gardeners on +44 (0) 20 7942 5889 (subject to staff availability).

Please note: Access to the Wildlife Garden will be via the Queens Gate road entrance from Tuesday 26 August until the first week in October. Normal access resumes via the west lawn entrance after this. We regret that the garden is closed to the public for London Fashion Week from Sunday 14 September to Saturday 20 September and apologise for any inconvenience. 

See a  Map of the Wildlife Garden .

During the summer term we run activities that complement National Curriculum Science and Early Learning Goals, see the  School activities  section for more information.

The wildlife Garden at the Natural History Museum

Dragonflies, foxes, sheep, robins, pheasant, woodcock, marsh marigolds, primroses, lime, hornbeam… the Wildlife Garden is a lush haven for thousands of British plant and animal species at different times of the year.

Bluebells in the Wildlife Garden

By mid-May bluebells dominate the woodland and their fragrance fills the air. Our native bluebell has a dainty, drooping, dark blue flower. The more robust, upright and paler blue flowers are Spanish bluebells. Can you spot the difference?

Marsh marigolds

Look for the bright yellow flowers of marsh marigolds around pond edges, ditches and marshy areas from March to May. They’re a good nectar source for insects and part of a vital wetland habitat.

Moorhen on the pond

The garden is full of small birds collecting nesting material – dead plant stalks, leaves, moss, feathers and sheep’s wool. Birds also weave pieces of string and plastic litter into their nests. Look out for blackbirds, robin, wrens, moorhens, finches and tits.

Azure damselfly on a leaf

Azure and common blue damselflies appear from late May. Their larvae are pond-dwellers living on midge larvae and water lice. Look out for blue-tailed and large red damselflies, too.