
We missed out on Wakefield’s Rhubarb Festival last year but they’ve been lucky enough to hit a rare spell of settled weather this weekend and the stalls on the precinct were busy.

Richard Bell's nature sketchbook since 1998

We missed out on Wakefield’s Rhubarb Festival last year but they’ve been lucky enough to hit a rare spell of settled weather this weekend and the stalls on the precinct were busy.


I drew my foot – in a Vivo Barefoot shoe – this morning as I waited at the hairdressers.

For my latest card, a guest artist. My niece Hannah drew a Black Dog on the Beach story with me when she was 5 or 6 years old. She’s since gone on, via a year’s work experience at DisneyWorld, Florida, to work in the travel industry, so I thought that it was time for update her original artwork for her birthday.

That’s me taking the part of the tourist.

Black-headed gull, wood pigeon and a small flock of starlings fly over Queen’s Drive, Ossett, as we have lunch at the fish and chip restaurant.

With less than a week to go before the start of meteorological spring, I’ve just started a new A6 landscape sketchbook, having just finished an even smaller pocket sketchbook, best suited to pen only. It’s good to be working in colour again.











Our first visit to The Redbrick Mill in Batley since before the pandemic. On a grey windswept morning it was good to see so much colour, artfully balanced by dozens of restfully grey sofas.

The latest round of homemade birthday cards include this Scottish beachcomber . . .

. . . and this Santa and his dog cartoon. Yes, it is a birthday card but it’s based on my great nephew Ted’s design for a card for the University of Hull, which featured his fantasy pet dog, Fudge, delivering presents with Rudolph. I’ve got competition.

And finally, for my brother Bill’s card, I dug out this Kodachrome of Bill, Dad and I with Vache the springer spaniel from a day out at the small lake where my dad used to go fishing at Terrington near Castle Howard in what is now North Yorkshire.
I’m the good looking one.

We’ve had three named storms in the last seven days and we decided that Newmillerdam would be too windswept and waterlogged for our Monday morning walk.

So instead we headed for Dobbies Garden Centre, Shelley, where we could enjoy the view across the valley of Shepley Dike through the panoramic windows of the cafe.

Some of the flowers already showing in the garden this weekend. As Storm Eunice has just gone through and Storm Franklin is about to arrive, these were from photographs taken yesterday morning.

With the periwinkle and hellebore, I found that I started in the top left of the drawing intending to keep things fairly small but as I added detail the scale changed so when I started on the lungwort I sketched the outlines roughly in pencil, allowing enough space to add detail.

I think this speeded up the whole process because I was just able to get on with the pen, knowing that I wouldn’t have to start fiddling to fit it all in.
I didn’t pencil in the crocus and the snowdrop. They consist mainly of isolated verticals, so they can be drawn individually. The branching pattern of the first three plants that I’d drawn meant that the relationship of one part to another needed a bit more care. I look for negative shapes between the leaves and when starting a new flower or leaf I look for the angle to points on the plant that I’ve already drawn.

Even without the trail cam, I can tell that the foxes are back. I found these two tennis balls cached at the edge of my wild flower bed down by the compost bins this morning.

With Storm Eunice lashing the studio windows, this seemed like a good time to prepare for getting out and sketching when the spring weather comes, checking the contents of my main art bag. This was drawn in the 8×8 inch Pink Pig Ameleie sketchbook, using the Lamy pens and the Winsor & Newton professional watercolours that I keep in there.
All ready to go out sketching now , , , when the weather improves.

These are the last couple of pages – and the back inside cover – in my pocket-sized sketchbook.

The multi-stemmed sycamore grows behind the Halifax, last remaining bank in Ossett.
