Know, grow, protect and enjoy South Africa's indigenous plants

Location: Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa

Kirstenbosch Branch

Kirstenbosch Branch officially began in 1985, but its roots go all the way back to the inception of Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden in 1913. The Botanical Society of South Africa was constituted to provide support for Kirstenbosch, and ever since, volunteers have been instrumental in keeping the gardens in good times and bad. 

About the branch

Today, this thriving branch has over 10 000 members, and its activities still prioritise strong volunteer support at Kirstenbosch – from offering guided tours and running the bookshop to working in the propagation facilities, BotSoc volunteers are integral to the success of South Africa’s most famous garden. Other branch activities include regular walks, talks, hacks, wildflower shows, educational outreach, and hugely popular annual plant sale. 

About the Area

Kirstenbosch is an iconic botanical garden located in one of the most beautiful parts of the world, on the slopes of Table Mountain, a World Heritage Site in Cape Town. However, this branch’s territory is much larger than its namesake garden. The Kirstenbosch Branch encompasses the Cape Town CBD area and surrounding suburbs in the north right down to the Cape Peninsula area in the south. Cape Town is located within a Conservation International biodiversity hotspot and is home to 19 distinct vegetation types, including multiple types of Sand Fynbos, Granite Fynbos, Shale Fynbos, Alluvium Fynbos, and Renosterveld, as well as Cape Flats Dune Strandveld, Southern Afrotemperate Forest and Cape Lowland Freshwater Wetland. Due to the highly developed level of the area, a large focus of this branch is on urban conservation and conservation gardening.

Cool Facts

1.

The Kirstenbosch Summer Sunset Concerts have become a staple in the Capetonian entertainment diary, but did you know these events were first started by the Kirstenbosch Branch in the early 90s as a fundraiser for the garden? The popularity of the concerts grew in scale until it was so large that Kirstenbosch management had to take them on.

2.

The R12million Millenium Project, one of the branch’s most successful, saw the acquisition of further land for Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden, construction of the Conservatory (and the cost of moving and installing a 7-ton Baobab tree!), new Visitor’s Centre including the bookshop, refurbishment of the Collections Nursery, as well as a new Garden Centre, Tea Room and ‘marquee lawn’ for functions.

3.

During the two world wars of the 21st Century, members of this branch kept Kirstenbosch afloat by collecting acorns and firewood from the garden, and selling them to the public.

4.

There are many places to view the natural wonders of Cape Town: Blaauwberg Nature Reserve, Bothasig Fynbos Nature Reserve, Cape Point National Park, De Hel Nature Area, Edith Stephens Wetland Park, False Bay Nature Reserve, Rietvlei Wetland Reserve, Rondebosch Common, Rondevlei Nature Reserve, Table Bay Nature Reserve, Table Mountain National Park, Tygerberg Nature Reserve, Wolfgat Nature Reserve, and Zandvlei Estuary Nature Reserve.

 

Branch Chair

Jeremy Wiley

Contact the Branch Office

info@botsoc-kirstenbosch.org.za

Latest Branch News

Webinar: Tree conservation
Fynbos gardeners: Why you should get your hands dirty this autumn
Circle of life
The quirks of growing Lowveld Chestnut
Follow the Eastern Cape’s plant signals
Growing the proud legacy of BotSoc
Growing trust Sthembile Zondi
Pride from abroad
1 10 11
 

Locate your Branch

ALBANY

Free State

KZN Coastal

Pretoria

Algoa

Garden Route

KZN Inland

Southern Overberg

Bankenveld

Kirstenbosch

Limpopo

Weskus

Cederberg

Kogelberg

Lowveld

Winelands

Hours

Monday to Friday 08h30 to 16h00. Closed on weekends and public holidays.

Contact Us

Our phones are faulty at the moment, please phone or send a message to our Whatsapp number: +27 65 922 6163 during our office hours.

GET INVOLVED

BECOME A MEMBER

DONATE

LEAVE A BEQUEST

VOLUNTEER

Pin It on Pinterest