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Dubai Miracle Garden: Absurdity in the desert

The taxi ride promised little excitement. It was mid-afternoon and the traffic flowed smoothly past the shiny tall buildings. Impossibly green grass and brilliant pink flowers edged the wide highway, and beyond that we saw sandy vacant lots, parked cars, huge billboards advertising the next luxury development or flashy car, construction sites spiked with tall cranes. It was the standard Dubai scenery.

Off the highway, the taxi driver (“Where are you from?” “Bangladesh.”) took us past rows of smaller residential housing, interspersed with the ever-present sandy construction sites. In the distance the haze (or smog?) was visible as a brown smudge above the horizon. The oppressive heat kept the windows closed and the air conditioning on high. More vacant lots – “Looks like a hotel is going up there.” – more residential housing, and we pulled into the dusty parking lot of Dubai Miracle Garden.

The entrance gate to Dubai Miracle Garden
The entrance gate to Dubai Miracle Garden

A garden? In Dubai?

I had chosen to visit Dubai Miracle Garden just based on wondering how Dubai could even have such a thing. On earlier visits I’d seen the indoor ski slope at the Mall of the Emirates. It was one of those shaking-your-head, who-even-thinks-of-such-a-thing-where-it-tops-forty-degrees-Celsius-in-the-summer sorts of places.

A garden in the desert? After all, that’s where Dubai is. It may look like a shiny modern city in all the photos, but it’s a shiny modern city plunked down in the desert. How could they possibly grow a garden there?

Flowers everywhere we looked in Dubai Miracle Garden.
Flowers everywhere we looked.

At the ski slope, I wondered how much energy it must take to keep it refrigerated through the summer. For the Dubai Miracle Garden, my first question was: how much water do they use?

I had talked two colleagues into visiting it with me, and though we were a bit worried about spending time outside in the heat (about 35C or 95F that afternoon), off we went.

For lots more things to do in Dubai, read this post: One Day in Dubai: what to do? 

Dubai Miracle Garden

If you’ve ever read this blog before, you’ll know I have a particular fondness for quirky, oddball sights like this one or this one. Just stepping through the gate confirmed for me that I’d made a good choice.

The first sight on entering the Dubai Miracle Garden is this thing, standing on four swans.

This is the first “floral design” inside the entrance. What do you think it represents?

My first thought was that it was an alien spacecraft. Or perhaps it depicted a four-legged alien. I showed both my kids the picture and they insisted it was an upside-down castle.

Whatever it was, it was covered with flowers (how do they water those?). At its “feet” were four massive swan sculptures. Straight ahead, if we walked under it, stood a tall red heart on poles, and, beyond that, a flower-covered gateway with mismatched towers.


Looking for a place to stay in Dubai? I generally use booking.com to find hotels.


This became a theme at Dubai Miracle Garden: juxtaposition of completely unrelated elements, often involving a bird of some sort.

For example, ostriches, their bodies covered in flowers, lined many of the walkways. Massive peacocks, also covered in flowers, overlooked the proceedings from on high. Three giant parrots, in this case flowerless, stood on three small hills. A fake pelican floated in the water feature.

Flowers on the gateway with the mismatched towers at Dubai Miracle Garden

And, of course, there were masses of flowers everywhere: 100 million, according to their website. Colorful, densely planted flowers covered almost everything, including many structures.

Emirates A380

If you read my post last year about flying on Emirates’ A380, you’ll know I’m a fan. I flew them again on these two recent trips to Dubai. Well, Dubai Miracle Gardens has an Emirates A380 too. It holds the Guinness World Record for largest flower arrangement/structure.

The problem is: it looks like it has crashed, which is perhaps not the message Emirates intended to send. Like most things in Dubai Miracle Gardens, the A380 is covered in flowers. Its fuselage rests on the ground, while its wings are supported by large fake tree trunks.

Our first glimpse of the A380 in Dubai Miracle Garden.
Our first glimpse of the A380

To add to the absurdity of this sight, a row of flower-covered ostriches lines the path to the plane. A bit further away, an even odder object stands alone: an enormous, beribboned hat, its brim and crown lined with flowers.

The A380 with its row of ostriches and a hat, in Dubai Miracle Garden.

What do A380s, ostriches and hats have to do with each other?

Other absurdities

What do ostriches have to do with an upside-down Volkswagen beetle?

An upside-down VW beetle fountain, with three ostriches, at the Dubai Miracle Garden

And is that John Lennon? Why is he throwing up?

Floral display that looks like John Lennon throwing up at Dubai Miracle Garden.
And what is he pouring from the vase in his hand?
A giant male head seems to emerge from a flower in Dubai Miracle Garden.

Who is this meant to be? Some sort of half-plant, half-man?

Figures of people, made from flowerpots, sit on a bench in front of a flower-covered "house" at Dubai Miracle Garden.

These flowerpot people seem to “live” in the flower-covered house behind them.

Dubai Miracle Gardens isn’t very big, but it manages to pack a lot into its small acreage. While it’s all too easy to make fun of the absurdity of it all – the seemingly random combinations, the whole idea of such a garden in the desert – we greatly enjoyed our visit. From the look of the crowds, many people appreciate it. On a late Sunday afternoon, it was swarming with people from all over the world, presumably the “expats” that Dubai relies on, who come to Dubai for work.

After several days in Dubai’s dusty, hazy, hot air, it was pleasant to smell earth and natural scents and fertility again. I can imagine that if I lived there, I’d go regularly just for that respite.

A suggestion: This half-day tour includes transportation as well as admission to both the Dubai Miracle Garden and the nearby Butterfly Garden.

Dubai Miracle Garden is only open from November to May. Check their website for exact dates. Admission for adults is 40 AED (10 euros or 11 US dollars) this year, 30 AED for children 3-12.

This image is perfect for Pinterest!
This image is perfect for Pinterest!


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about Rachel

Hi, I’m Rachel!

Rachel’s Ruminations is a travel blog focused on independent travel with an emphasis on cultural and historical sites/sights. I also occasionally write about life as an expatriate. I hope you enjoy what I post here; feel free to leave comments!  Read more…
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Stranger and stranger! Looks like there are occasional flashes of some artistic vision but the very randomness of the flower “sculptures” could lead to the question, “But where?” On the other hand, plunked down in the middle of a desert, the urban garden oasis looks like a welcome attraction for all flower lovers. I can see why you enjoyed your respite! Anita

I don’t know much about Dubai but I was not expecting this in a place I equate with the desert! WOW! Those flowers are stunning and the structures are so fun and creative!

Wow!.. Beautiful flowers! You must have spent a long time here. I have been to Dubai twice and never did get a chance to come here. I should probably pin it for my next visit later this year :)..

That is one weird garden. But it does look like a lot of fun.

I love quirky and bizarre and this definitely qualifies – my favorite are the flower ostriches, they would look perfect in any locale

When i saw your photos on Instagram, I thought, “What???” I must admit that if I were ever in Dubai I would want to see these displays. As weird as they are, they are really neat.

John Lennon vomiting/ Love it. Also love your shot of the selfie couple in front of that, whatever it is. Strange, cool garden!

Suspect it takes a lot of care, maintenance and money for a garden to thrive in a desert!

BizarroLand just keeps getting more bizarre! Only in Dubai. (but yes, I’d go see it, too!)

This is truly a miracle garden! Seems like a piece of paradise!

Hmm…I’ve never heard of the Miracle Garden of Dubai but it sure looks interesting. The quirkier the better for me so I think I would really enjoy visiting. And John Lennon throwing up? That’s about as quirky as you can get.

Oh, I laughed a lot while reading your post. This garden is a favorite place of instagrammers. However, they do not show any photos of the absurd pieces. Kind of interesting. At least, the entrance price is not that high (I was expecting something more Dubai like, $30 or $40). #TPThursday