Join Cambridge University Botanic Garden's 'Mystery of the Moonflower' interactive event

Join in the ‘Mystery of the Moonflower’ online interactive event with TV presenters Maddie Moate and Greg Foot, this half term from Cambridge University Botanic Garden

As part of this year’s Twilight with the Museums, award winning TV presenters, Maddie Moate and Greg Foot (CBeebies’ Maddie’s Do You Know?, Blue Peter, Let’s Go Live) are going online - in a unique livestreamed event - to find clues, solve puzzles and search the tropical rainforests and deserts of Cambridge University Botanic Garden’s Glasshouses by night! Help them find the secrets of the mysterious Moonflower which flowered at the Garden for the first time last year.

The Moonflower is known to be one of the rarest flowers in the world, its secrets known to only a few. In the darkness of the Garden’s glasshouses, amongst the tropical trees and orchids on Wednesday 16 February at 7pm the Mystery of the Moonflower awaits…

But wait… Maddie and Greg need your help to unlock the secrets of this amazing plant! Join them online to help spot clues and solve puzzles, as they travel from mountain habitats, to tropical rainforest, wetlands and arid lands, discovering plants as they attempt – only with your help - to escape from the Glasshouses armed with the secrets of the mysterious Moonflower!

Maddie and Greg say: “We are REALLY excited to be taking part in ‘The Mystery of Moonflower’! We love escape rooms, interactive games, and adventure stories, so we can’t wait to bring all those together for this interactive twilight livestream! The best part is that for this adventure we get to bring YOU online detectives along to help us find clues and solve the puzzles! We’ll see you on-screen on the 16th Feb!”

Sally Lee, Learning Officer at Cambridge University Botanic Garden adds: “I’m not sure Maddie and Greg know what they’re letting themselves in for! Though I’m sure they’ll have fun because we’ve got such exciting puzzles planned and the Glasshouses are so atmospheric after dark. One thing’s for sure, they are definitely going to need viewers’ help to solve some of the mysteries, so they will need as many people as possible tuning in on the night.”

‘Mystery of the Moonflower’ is suitable for suitable for children of all ages with a sense of adventure (and adults may enjoy it too!) It will take place live on YouTube at bit.ly/MoonflowerMystery on Wednesday 16 February at 7pm.

The ‘Mystery of the Moonflower’ event is free for all to watch online and is part of the University of Cambridge’s Twilight with the Museums: Digital Sleepover from 4.30pm, Wednesday 16 February where the University of Cambridge Museums (UCM) and local partners are inviting families to recreate the wonder of a night at the museums in their own homes.



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