I visited Woods Mill today and was in a very short space of time enraptured with the same sense of excitement that I used to feel as a small boy on school trips. This might in part have been brought about by the fact that, for the larger proportion, that's what Woods Mill Nature Reserve is all about. Aside from the preservation of large quantities of birds, fish and amphibians the nature reserve succeeds at every turn to bring you small and interesting amounts of information on each habitat and creature therein. As you enter from the car park there's a notice board with details of events and leaflets for you to pick up. I recommend grabbing the one on the nature reserve itself first as it has a map outlining the route of the winding, sometimes tree covered, path and all the exciting features along the way. In some ways I did get the feeling that the whole place was a little over engineered with so many habitats, which would normally have so much more space, all so close in together. But once you start to see the results of this arrangement such as the lake literally heaving with fish, you soon lose that feeling to fascination. There is also a bird hide, a small wood and perhaps most exciting of all a "Dipping Pond" where in the right months of the year you can head down with your jam jar on a bit of string and catch sticklebacks and newts. All very Gussie Fink-Nottle, but then this is one of the few remaining places where you might still be able to train boys to be the kind more commonly found in a P. G. Wodehouse novel. read more