St Andrews Botanic Garden

St Andrews Botanic Garden 🌳 18-acre Botanic Garden in St Andrews
🌼 A window to a wilder world
🔬 Botanical projects | Family events | Exhibitions
📅 Open daily 10-4PM
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What if Botanic Gardens aren’t (just) refuges for rare and threatened plants – but actually the source of the next waves...
08/06/2026

What if Botanic Gardens aren’t (just) refuges for rare and threatened plants – but actually the source of the next waves of plant invasions? And how do human land management and gardening practices change the nature of the non-native plants that we grow or welcome in to our landscapes?

These are tough questions to explore and St Andrews Botanic Garden is part of international programmes that are trying to unpick them: here in the sand dune experiment you can see how we are working on the first question, with plants starting to establish amongst the sedges, marram and lyme grasses: some of these are native, like the foxgloves, others are non-native, like the tree lupins, some are introduced by us, like the Lilium lancifolium and Stanleya pinnata, others have arrived of their own accord, like the orchids and Viper’s-bugloss. In this experiment we are recording the abundance, distribution and physiology of these plants every year to see not just which plants are capable of establishing but where they spread to and how their behaviour changes accordingly.

The question of the biodiversity benefits of native and non-native plants is a separate but related question and for us here at SABG, links to the second question posed above, and which we are working on in the Games for Light experiment elsewhere in the Garden. It’s one of the hottest questions in horticulture at the moment and one that can only be addressed by these sorts of comparative, structured long-term research projects that you would never want to do in a nature reserve – but are exactly right for living laboratories in a botanic garden.

If you’d like to know more about the research we’re doing on how the ecological drivers of evolution are being shaped by the ways we work with or abandon plants, please check out some of these recent publications and get in touch.

The Chusan Palm (Trachycarpus fortunei, growing in the Games for Light hillside experiment) is set for its best flowerin...
04/06/2026

The Chusan Palm (Trachycarpus fortunei, growing in the Games for Light hillside experiment) is set for its best flowering in years. One to keep an eye on- not long to go now!

This plant needs good summer heat to flower at its best but none of us can remember any fruit on it- perhaps this will be the year…

Ivy, honeysuckle and rose, three native climbers scrambling over each other here. In public landscapes, arboriculturists...
03/06/2026

Ivy, honeysuckle and rose, three native climbers scrambling over each other here. In public landscapes, arboriculturists tend to discourage plants climbing in and through trees because it makes it difficult to assess the condition of the trunk and their safety, with the curious consequence that you tend not to see this important group of plants so much in some public gardens and arboreta.

We’re thinking about alternative ways and places to grow climbing plants at the moment, and this carefully-felled Scots Pine could be a nice opportunity to create a floriferous arch. However the big question is which plants to grow! If you’ve a favourite or a plant that you’d like to see, let us know in the comments.

This is the time of year when going for a walk with a botanist becomes a pain in the neck- tiny flowers everywhere, each...
02/06/2026

This is the time of year when going for a walk with a botanist becomes a pain in the neck- tiny flowers everywhere, each demanding close attention and friends start to lose patience quickly.

At the moment we’re looking at the collection of Buckthorns (genus Rhamnus) in the Botanic Garden- in the first picture is a shrub that is probably Rhamnus cathartica, described as “having no particular merit” by Trees and Shrubs Online, but nonetheless an important species for biodiversity in GB and Europe and from our perspective, very worthy of a fresh look. Rhamnus alpina and fallax, grow here amongst many other Buckthorn species and are particularly to distinguish. Elsewhere, the Euonymus also fall into this category, with the third pic showing a shrub from the complex group that’s currently known as Euonymus hamiltonianus- who knows how much longer for though, as it’s a varied group that’s distributed across a wide range of central and Eastern Asia; and in the final pic, a cloud of Sanicle (Sanicula europaea), a GB native woodland specialist growing here in the shade of the Himalayan Cotoneaster gamblei.

Next time you visit, bring a loup! And if you don’t have one, we’ll happily lend you one, just ask at the visitor centre.

This red form of the Japanese Enkianthus is flowering beautifully in the Rhododendron Wood at the moment- and a good exa...
01/06/2026

This red form of the Japanese Enkianthus is flowering beautifully in the Rhododendron Wood at the moment- and a good example of how botanical nomenclature gets mixed up and leads to all sorts of confusions in the horticultural trade and gardens. This plant is labelled as Enkianthus cernuus f. Rubens but is actually the closely related Enkianthus campanulata (possibly the selection Red Bells?). Aside from the fact that E. campanulata is much more widely planted, the easy way to tell the difference between the two species is that E. campanulata has bells with tips that point outwards and in E. cernuus, they point inwards. Come and see them growing here alongside other Enkianthus species, and check their names in your local nursery or garden centre!

We are looking for a Head Gardener to lead our Garden, Conservation and Nursery teams. This is an exciting role as we pr...
26/05/2026

We are looking for a Head Gardener to lead our Garden, Conservation and Nursery teams. This is an exciting role as we prepare for the next phase of the Garden's future, and the successful candidate can expect to join a growing team and a range of projects at the cutting edge of research, design and conservation.

For details about the role please go to www.standrewsbotanic.org/jobs and write to [email protected] by 12th June 2026.

Reminder: We are holding a stall at the Scone Palace Garden Fair on the 29th and 30th of May! 🦋Join us for the perfect d...
11/05/2026

Reminder: We are holding a stall at the Scone Palace Garden Fair on the 29th and 30th of May! 🦋

Join us for the perfect day out for gardening enthusiasts and their families. Situated in the beautiful gardens of , and hosting an incredible line-up of exhibitors and makers, gardening workshops, the Scottish Garden Design Competition, and much more, the garden fair is an event you won't want to miss!

🦇 Join us for a FREE Evening Bat Walk at St Andrews Botanic Garden! 🌙As part of our BioBlitz Day on Saturday 16th May, w...
10/05/2026

🦇 Join us for a FREE Evening Bat Walk at St Andrews Botanic Garden! 🌙
As part of our BioBlitz Day on Saturday 16th May, we’re heading into the Garden after dark to discover the fascinating world of bats!
Led by students from the University of St Andrews, this guided evening walk will use bat detectors and careful observation to explore which bat species are active around the Garden and learn more about these amazing nocturnal mammals.

📅 Saturday 16th May
🕣 8:30PM – approx. 10PM
📍 St Andrews Botanic Garden
🎟 FREE – booking required

Please bring:
🔦 A torch/flashlight if you have one
🧥 Warm outdoor clothing
🥾 Suitable footwear
The walk finish time may vary slightly depending on what wildlife we discover during the evening.
Places are limited, so if you book and later can’t attend, we’d really appreciate you letting us know so we can offer your space to someone else.
Come and experience the Garden in a completely different way after sunset! 🦇✨

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/bioblitz-bat-walk-tickets-1989154090431?aff=ebdsoporgprofile

We are officially holding a stall at the Scone Palace Garden Fair on the 29th and 30th of May! 🦋Join us for the perfect ...
04/05/2026

We are officially holding a stall at the Scone Palace Garden Fair on the 29th and 30th of May! 🦋

Join us for the perfect day out for gardening enthusiasts and their families. Situated in the beautiful gardens of , and hosting an incredible line-up of exhibitors and makers, gardening workshops, the Scottish Garden Design Competition, and much more, the garden fair is an event you won't want to miss!

Our garden team is hard at work planting around our Zelkova Serrata tree at the garden entrance! By using plants with sp...
02/05/2026

Our garden team is hard at work planting around our Zelkova Serrata tree at the garden entrance! By using plants with spreading habits like the purple Catlins Giants, we can guarantee lots of ground cover and a lush full garden welcome to all our visitors. We used a grid format while planting to disperse the density of the plants and craft a nature-focused arrangement.

We're looking forward to when these flourish come next year!

Address

Canongate
St Andrews
KY168RT

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 4pm
Tuesday 10am - 4pm
Wednesday 10am - 4pm
Thursday 10am - 4pm
Friday 10am - 4pm
Saturday 10am - 4pm
Sunday 10am - 4pm

Telephone

+441334461200

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