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Registration is required for “members only” events. Also, we ask unwell members to refrain from attending.

If you have received a Nature London email confirmation of registration for a field trip and you cannot attend, it is good to cancel and free the space for someone on the waiting list. You can cancel by replying to your confirmation email or reminder email.  If the event was booked through Eventbrite or another group, you would have to cancel through them.

To start enjoying all events and Nature London’s other member benefits, click the “Join Us” link above.

Ontario Reptile and Amphibian Atlas – Story and Findings

London Civic Garden Complex
Attendance: 37 / 200

The Atlas is based on a 10-year community science project.
From 6:45 to 7:15, the Finance Committee will host an in-person Q&A session in the lobby.
MEMBERS ONLY – REGISTRATION REQUIRED

Brett Forsyth’s Human-powered Ontario Big Year

London Civic Garden Complex
Attendance: 36 / 200

In 2022, Brett Forsyth embarked on an adventure to set Ontario’s first human-powered big year record.
MEMBERS ONLY – REGISTRATION REQUIRED – THURSDAY NIGHT

Eco-Grant Presentations

London Civic Garden Complex
Attendance: 38 / 200

Here are the 2024 Eco-Grant winners; Elmwood Ave Presbyterian Church Project: Elmwood Anniversary Pollinator Garden Thames Talbot Land Trust Title: Native Seeds for Restoration ReForest London Classroom to Canopy: ReForest […]

Annual General Meeting & Lorraine Roy, Art Textiles (NL Members Only)

London Civic Garden Complex
Attendance: 60 / 200

Textile artist Lorraine Roy will present her artistic journey in words and pictures as she describes how trees wove their way into her art and her heart.
MEMBERS ONLY – REGISTRATION REQUIRED

How do small birds survive harsh winters? (NL Members Only)

London Civic Garden Complex
Attendance: 45 / 200

Dr. Carrie Branch will discuss strategies animals use to survive winter when they don’t migrate and share some exciting results from a long-term research project in the Sierra Nevada mountains showing that natural selection acts on the spatial cognitive abilities of mountain chickadees.