Every so often, television does something quietly radical. No major fanfares or VFX. Just truth, beauty and a gentle reminder that nature never actually left - we just stopped paying attention.
That’s exactly why Wild London, now showing on BBC One, feels like such a moment. As The Guardian put it: this is as good as telly gets.
And for anyone involved in rewilding, from national policy makers to people planting clover on a balcony, it lands like a quiet standing ovation.
A Love Letter to Urban Nature (Without the Gimmicks)
What Wild London does brilliantly is refuse to treat the city as a lost cause.
Hosted by Sir David Attenborough, instead of framing urban spaces as ecological write-offs, Sir David shows London as it really is - a messy, accidental, stubbornly alive ecosystem.
Foxes weaving through night-time streets.
Birds reclaiming forgotten corners.
Rivers, parks, railway lines and back gardens acting as unseen wildlife corridors.
No over-produced drama. No manufactured peril. Just patience, craft and deep respect for the subject.
In other words: nature, trusted to be interesting on its own terms.
The Big Idea: Rewilding Isn’t Somewhere Else
One of the most powerful undercurrents in Wild London is this: rewilding isn’t a remote Highlands project or a fenced-off nature reserve.
It’s here.
It’s happening:
in canals and rivers
in parks and cemeteries
on rooftops, verges, balconies and back gardens
That idea sits right at the heart of what we do at LettsSafari. Like Wild London we say:
Urban nature matters
Small-scale change counts
You don’t need to “escape” the city to reconnect with the wild
That’s why shows like this matter. They don’t just entertain - they reframe what feels possible.
And once something feels possible, people act.
How LettsSafari Fits Into This Bigger Story
At LettsSafari, we work on the same principle Wild London celebrates: rewilding works best when it’s accessible, local and human-scale.
Our approach supports:
small rewilding projects
practical guidance for gardens and balconies
long-term restoration that favours ecosystems, not aesthetics alone
No perfection required. No “expert” badge needed. Just curiosity, consistency and care.
If Wild London shows what’s already happening around us, LettsSafari exists to help you take part in it.
The Quiet Takeaway
The Guardian was right. Television doesn’t get much better than this.
But the real magic of Wild London is that it doesn’t end when the credits roll.
It lingers the next time you notice weeds breaking through concrete.
Or birdsong cutting through traffic noise.
Or a patch of green that suddenly looks… busy.
Nature isn’t waiting for us to save it.
It’s waiting for us to notice, and then give it a little more room.
And honestly?
That might be the best story on TV right now.




