articles

Our ‘Butterfly Pavilion’ Experience at the Natural History Museum

Open Friday, September 16 – Sunday, October 16, 2016

By www.walnut.macaronikid.com September 25, 2016


The new, larger 'Butterfly Pavilion' is now open at the Natural History Museum.  If you want to go to a place filled with butterflies at every step, this is it! This is a fun place to take your kids to see many species of colorful butterflies up close.  When we were there on opening day, the butterflies were not afraid of us.  They fluttered right by, brushing our shoulders, head or feet and at times landed on us!  


Kids will be able identify the different species with the guide provided, better yet, make it into a game and see who can find the most butterflies identified on the guide.  We stayed a good 40 minutes here before heading off to find butterflies outdoors.  This is an experience you don't want to miss.  This Pavilion is only open till October 16th.


Outdoor living habitat features increased flight space and better viewing opportunities for 25 species of free-flying butterflies



The Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County (NHM) has re-designed and re-built its popular outdoor Butterfly Pavilion exhibit, which opens to the public September 16. Though it is still located on the south side of the museum, the new and permanent structure has enhanced design features for its hundreds of butterfly residents: more vertical fly space, and a rounded structure that provides more light (which is better for flight) and more space for them to perch. 


In the airy and roomier pavilion, museum visitors will delight in the more than 25 species of butterflies flitting around in their new digs. Museum entomologists have stocked the pavilion with North American butterflies, which flutter among flowering plants inside the enclosed habitat. Visitors may stop to admire a chrysalis and marvel as colorful winged creatures alight on nectar-filled flowers. They will spot monarchs, queens, malachites and various longwings and swallowtails, among others.

 

Clear for Landing

Some Pavilion visitors may find that curious butterflies alight delicately on their arms or shoulders. There are many theories about why some people make more attractive perches than others, including clothing colors and smells. While there’s no sure-fire way to get a butterfly to land on you, moving slowly, being tall, and wearing a hat seem to help. For more tips, NHM’s Gallery Interpreters will be in the pavilion every day to help with butterfly identification and to offer tidbits about metamorphosis and butterfly anatomy.

 

In the Nature Gardens

There’s also plenty of butterfly activity outside the Pavilion this year. In the 3½-acre Nature Gardens, the immersion into all-things-butterfly continues. This outdoor botanical showroom features 600-plus species of native and nonnative plants that grow well in Southern California’s Mediterranean climate. The Nature Gardens’ Pollinator Garden, in particular, is a butterfly magnet. The garden attracts some species that won’t be inside the Pavilion, because they breed well in unrestricted, outdoor spaces: the fiery skipper, Hylephila phyleus, which lays its eggs on grasses, and the gray hairstreak, Strymon melinus, which lays its eggs on native buckwheats. Museum visitors will also see a host of butterflies getting a dose of the sugary nectar of lilac verbena and California aster. They may spot the cloudless sulphur, too, which lays eggs on the flower tips of the feathery cassia plants. Whether outside in the gardens or in the new Pavilion, visitors are certain to see a bevy of showstoppers in flight.


NHM Butterfly Pavilion Ticketing Information

Museum Members and children age 2 and under are admitted to Butterfly Pavilion for free. Prices for general admission plus the Pavilion are as follows: Adults, $17; College students and seniors, $14; Children ages (3-12), $8. Regular Museum admission is: Adults, $12; Students and Seniors, $9; Children (3-12), $5. Museum Members and children age 2 and under are admitted for free.  Because of the Butterfly Pavilion’s short run this year, we highly recommend purchasing tickets in advance at nhm.org. Tickets go on sale online August 22.  

 

About the Natural History Museum

The Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County serves over one million families and visitors annually, and is a national leader in research, exhibitions, and education. It has amassed one of the world’s most extensive and valuable collections of natural and cultural history, with more than 35 million objects, some as old as 4.5 billion years. The Natural History Family of Museums includes the NHM (Exposition Park), the Page Museum at the La Brea Tar Pits (Hancock Park/Mid-Wilshire), and the William S. Hart Museum (Newhall, California). NHM is at 900 Exposition Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90007 and is open seven days a week 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. For more information, visit the Museum’s website at nhm.org or call (213) 763-DINO.