Rodley Nature Reserve

Rodley

You drive down through what feels like a factory yard, cross a small swing-bridge over the canal then cross the River Aire via a century-old 38m long Pratt truss steel bridge to reach a low-lying area of lagoons and meadows, enclosed on three sides by a meander of the river, so that being on the reserve feels like being on an island. We’re actually on the inner side of the busy Leeds Ring Road, but I feel as if I’ve got a long way away from all that rush.

As a change from my usual approach, I thought I’d launch straight into watercolour for this sketch – no pen, no pencil – which is based on a panorama that I took from one of the hides on a Wakefield Naturalists’ Society field meeting at the reserve in August this year. No field meetings at all this year, which is probably a first for the Nats since the end of World War II.

Dalesman article

This is the header image for my August Wild Yorkshire nature diary in The Dalesman.

Harvest Mouse

Harvest mouse

With its meadows now full of wild flowers going to seed, Rodley Nature Reserve, to the west of Leeds, is a perfect habitat for harvest mice.

My photographs were taken in the visitor centre there where a large vivarium contains a captive colony. Since 2012, 900 harvest mice have been released here.

Harvest mouse

They build tennis-ball sized nests amongst the stems of reeds and grasses.

As it clambers about amongst vegetation, the harvest mouse uses its long tail to grasp stems.

Link

Harvest Mouse Introduction at Rodley