RSPB - giving nature a home
Search
Close
Skip to content
Shop | Community
Log in | Sign up
  • About the RSPB
      About us
    • Our history
    • Our mission
    • How the RSPB is run
    • RSPB Media Centre
    • RSPB job vacancies
    • At home & abroad
    • International
    • England
    • Northern Ireland
    • Scotland
    • Wales
    • Get in touch
    • Contact us
    • RSPB offices
    • Connect with us your way
      Our activities
    • Gardening for wildlife

      Gardening for wildlife

      See our ideas to keep you connected to nature during coronavirus

    • Connect with us your way

      Connect with us your way

      From our regular emails to your favourite social media, there’s more than one way to keep in touch with nature

    • Martin Harper Blog

      Martin Harper Blog

  • Our work
      Nature conservation
    • Conservation and sustainability
    • Projects
    • Landscape scale conservation
    • Centre for Conservation Science
    • Satellite tracking birds
    • RSPB News
    • RSPB News
    • 'Our work' blog
    • Our positions and casework
    • Our positions
    • Casework
    • State of Nature report
      Featured news
    • Mindful mornings

      Mindful mornings

      If you can’t get outside, why not bring the outside in by downloading our bird song radio app?

    • How nature can help protect our homes

      How nature can help protect our homes

      Following the floods this winter, watch how one area is using nature as a natural protector.

    • Casework

      Casework

      Catch up with the RSPB’s own nature detectives on the case as they look to save some very special places.

  • Birds & wildlife
      Wildlife guides
    • Identify a bird
    • Bird A-Z
    • Other garden wildlife
    • Guide to birdwatching
    • UK conservation status explained
    • Nature's Calendar: January
    • Nature's Home magazine
    • About Nature's Home magazine
    • Birds and wildlife articles
    • RSPB Podcasts
    • Nature's Home blog
    • Advice
    • How you can help birds
    • Gardening for wildlife
    • Ask an expert
    • Wildlife and the law
    • How to report crimes against wild birds
    • Bird songs
    • Which bird song is that?
    • Most popular bird guides this month
    • Which bird song is that?

      Which bird song is that?

      Find out how to identify a bird just from the sound of its singing with our bird song identifier playlist.

    • Who to contact if you spot an injured or baby bird

      Who to contact if you spot an injured or baby bird

      Read more advice about what to do if you find a bird that needs help

    • In for a duck

      In for a duck

      It’s nesting season for our waterfowl too but what are the rules you need to follow for ducks, geese or swans?

  • Get involved
      Activities
    • Big Garden Birdwatch
    • Help nature at home
    • RSPB Competitions
    • Dolphinwatch
    • Community & advice
    • Join our local groups
    • How green are you?
    • RSPB Community
    • Get involved blog
    • Volunteering & fundraising
    • Volunteer
    • Fundraise
    • Help nature thrive as a corporate partner
    • Our grant funders
    • Campaigning
    • Climate change effects on nature and wildlife
    • Protecting wildlife sites
    • Campaign with us
    • Five actions to Revive Our World
    • Let nature sing
    • OxCam Arc
    • Top activities to do
    • Help nature at home

      Help nature at home

      Great ideas on how your garden, or even a small backyard or balcony, can become a mini nature reserve

    • How green are you?

      How green are you?

      See some of the ways you can get into green living.

    • Campaigning

      Campaigning

      See our toolkit for ways to campaign with us to protect nature and save wildlife.

  • Reserves & events
      Reserves A-Z Events, dates & inspiration
    • Events
    • COVID-19 information
    • Dates with nature
    • Places to visit blog
    • #ThanksToYou
    • Find a reserve
      Top reserve this month
    • Marshside

      Marshside

      This fantastic wetland site is located north of Southport town centre and has some of the best wildlife in the region.

    • Lytchett Fields

      Lytchett Fields

      The reserve has seen more than thirty species of wading birds.

    • Arne

      Arne

      Heathland home to more than 2565 species.

  • Fun & Learning
      For teachers
    • Supporting resources
    • Wild Challenge
    • School outreach visits
    • Big Schools Birdwatch
    • Sign up for the newsletter
    • School trip ideas
    • For families
    • Big Wild Sleepout
    • Wild Challenge
    • Nature reserves for families
    • For kids
    • Fun factoids for all the family
    • Games and activities
    • Kids stories
    • RSPB kids competitions
    • Latest kids' activities
    • Wild Challenge

      Wild Challenge

      Nature is an adventure waiting to be had. Get out, get busy and get wild!

    • Fun factoids for all the family

      Fun factoids for all the family

      Find out more about the nature and wildlife outside your window.

    • Youth membership

      Youth membership

      As well as a free gift and magazines, you’ll get loads of ideas for activities to try at home.

  • Join & Donate
      Join us
    • Choose a membership
    • Family membership
    • Youth membership
    • Gift membership
    • RSPB Life Fellow Membership
    • Renew your membership
    • Our 2020 film
    • Donate
    • Our appeals
    • Make a one-off donation
    • Make a regular donation
    • Memorial donations
    • Plant a memorial tree
    • In memoriam booklet download form
    • Thank you
    • Leave a gift in your Will
    • Other people's gifts
    • Legacy donation FAQs
    • Legacy administration
    • Legacy booklet download form
    • Thank you
    • Other ways to help
    • Gift Aid
    • Support us when you shop
    • RSPB Images
    • RSPB second-hand binocular scheme
    • Win with the RSPB
    • Payroll Giving
    • Stamp out albatross deaths
  • Login to your account Sign up for an RSPB account
  • Shop
  • Community
  • Home
  • Reserves & events
  • Reserves A-Z
  • St Aidan's

St Aidan's

In line with Government guidance on essential, daily exercise outdoors, our trails are open. Following the recent storms, wellies are needed. Our visitor centre, toilets and refreshments are closed. See full facilities information below. We urge you to follow the legislation around non-essential travel and please visit your most local nature reserves and green spaces only. Please observe current guidelines on social distancing, face coverings, group sizes, hygiene and follow all signage on-site. See our Covid-19 updates page for the latest safety information (link below). Thank you for your support and understanding.
gallery image
gallery image
gallery image
gallery image
gallery image
gallery image
gallery image
gallery image
gallery image
gallery image
gallery image
gallery image
Address
RSPB St Aidan's Nature Park, Astley Lane, Leeds LS26 8AL
Grid ref
SE399287

 

See our reserves Covid-19 updates page for which sites are open and other important details.

 

Just a stone’s throw from the centre of Leeds, St Aidan’s is a stunning park to explore. Whether you’re on foot, on your bike, riding your horse or have your camera at the ready, take advantage of the amazing views and wonderful wildlife including bitterns, avocets, black terns, skylarks and meadow pipits.

Plan your visit

Opening times

Reserve and trails: Open daily, 6am-6pm.

Car park: Open daily, 6am-6pm

Toilets: Closed

Visitor Centre: Closed

 

Festive opening times:

  • Christmas Eve: visitor centre and toilets are closed. Car park and trails open 6am- 6pm.
  • Christmas Day: visitor centre and toilets are closed. Car park and trails open 6am- 6pm.
  • Boxing Day: visitor centre and toilets are closed. Car park and trails open 6am- 6pm.
  • New Year’s Eve: Visitor centre and toilets open 10am-4pm. Car park and trails open 6am- 6pm.
  • New Year’s Day: Visitor centre and toilets open 10am-4pm. Car park and trails open 6am- 6pm.
  • All other days in the festive period are open our usual winter opening hours as above.

Entrance charges

Free entrance to RSPB members
Yes
Adults
Free
Children
Free
Car park cost

There are no entrance charges to the reserve, but the following car parking charges apply:

  • RSPB members: FREE (please get a free members ticket from our car parking machine and display along with your membership card (face down) in your windscreen)
  • Non-members: £4 per car
  • Blue badge holders: FREE

Facilities

  • Visitor centre is closed
  • Car park
  • Toilets are closed
  • Accessible toilets are closed
  • Baby changing is closed
  • Pushchair friendly
  • Refreshments facilities are closed
  • Binocular hire is closed
  • Guided walks is closed
  • Viewing points are closed
  • Nature trails

Accessibility

  • Full accessibility information (external website)

How to get here

By train

The nearest railway station is Woodlesford, which is 3 miles (5km) away or Garforth, which is 4 miles away. There is a taxi firm based at Garforth station and taxis can access Woodlesford.

By bus

Buses run to Allerton Bywater from Leeds City Centre and Castleford (bus service 167). The nearest bus stop is Bowers Row stop number 45010157. This is 0.2 miles from the visitor centre.

By bike

The nearest Sustrans Cycle routes are the National Route 67 - Trans Pennine Trail Central, Yorks and Derbyshire and the National Route 697. Both of these run right next to the site.

By road

Leave the M1 at junction 46 towards Garforth follow the Selby Road/A63, turn right at the roundabout onto A642, turn left after 1.4 miles onto Astley Lane, the reserve is on the right after 1.5 miles.

Sat nav POI file: If you have a satellite navigation system that can accept POI files, please see our POI page for a download link and instructions.

Other ways to get there

St Aidan’s can be accessed via several cycle routes. The Linesway from Garforth is connected directly into St Aidan’s from the East and the Transpennine trail connects onto the site from 3 access points on the south side.

Get directions from Google Maps
RSPB reserves on Google Earth

Information for dog owners

Please keep your dog on a lead and under close, effective control at all times, due to the sensitive wildlife and habitats here. We know that the countryside is a dog walking paradise. It’s important to remember the special surroundings here are wonderful havens for rare wildlife so we’ve created a designated recreation area for you and your pooch to enjoy. Even if dogs are very well behaved, wildlife can easily become startled by a loose dog they perceive as a predator.

Disturbing wildlife does more than simply causing it to move away; it uses up their energy, decreasing their chance of survival regardless of season. Thank you for protecting the special wildlife here by keeping your dog on a lead and under close, effective control.

  • Dogs are welcome in the recreation area, indicated in grey hatching on our site maps.
  • Dog water bowls and tie-up area are available at the visitor centre.
  • Sorry, dogs aren’t permitted in the visitor centre other than assistance dogs.
  • Dogs die in hot cars, please do not leave your dog in the car when visiting us.

Group booking information

Groups are usually welcome to visit us during normal opening hours. However, changes to laws in England mean that the maximum group size able to visit our reserves together is currently 6, unless you are from the same household or bubble.

Schools booking information

*Due to Covid-19 measures, we are currently not taking school bookings until further notice. In the meantime, check out our fantastic range of resources for teachers here, or take on the Schools’ Wild Challenge here.* 

What will the weather be like?

14 degrees, Sunny day

Downloads

Find your way around St Aidan's. PDF, 714Kb.

Map of RSPB St Aidan's reserve

Contact St Aidan's

  • RSPB St Aidan's Nature Park, Astley Lane, Leeds LS26 8AL
  • staidans@rspb.org.uk
  • 01132 320529
  • @RSPBAireValley
  • Find us on facebook

What will you see?

Our star species

    Bittern illustration

    Bittern

    Listen to bitterns boom as they lurk amongst the reeds between March and May.

    Adult black-headed gull

    Black-headed gull

    The black-headed gull colony at St Aidan’s can reach approximately 1000 pairs in spring and summer. It’s a spectacle for all the senses and provides cover from predators for rarer birds.

     Skylark illustration

    Skylark

    Throughout spring and summer skylarks can be heard singing overhead as they search for mates and defend territory; flying so high they almost disappear, before descending on open wings.

    Marsh Harrier male in flight

    Marsh harrier

    Marsh harrier can be seen soaring and hunting all year round at St Aidan’s, watch for them quartering over the reedtops and wet grassland looking of prey.

    Short eared owl

    Short-eared owl

    In winter, short eared owls can be seen hunting along the hillsides. Sometimes described as giant moths, these silent hunters glide on languid wingbeats.

Seasonal highlights

  • Spring
  • Summer
  • Autumn
  • Winter

Everything is starting to sing, pair up and build nests. Skylarks are starting to sing and bitterns starting to boom. Watch great crested grebes dance on the lakes and the black-headed gulls start to gather.

See broods of gosling nestled in. The nesting islands are a mass of activity as common tern and black-headed gull chicks hatch. Iridescent dragonflies bask on and around the trails and the grasslands are alive with the bright colours of flowers, bees and butterflies.

Thousands of wading birds pass through the Aire Valley on their migration, such as green sandpipers and black-tailed godwits. Large numbers of starlings start to gather and as the autumn progresses, the murmurations build. Watch huge flocks of starlings dance and swoop down into the reedbeds just to the side of the path to go to sleep safely for the night.

Large flocks of wigeon graze on the wet grassland. Flocks of wintering waders take to the skies when a peregrine appears on the lookout for a meal.

About St Aidan's

Habitat

The main trails at St Aidan's take you amongst a variety of habitats including reedbed, wetland, meadows and woodland.

Conservation

St Aidan’s Nature Park is managed by the RSPB for visitors and wildlife, on behalf of Leeds City Council.

Site information

Enjoy panoramic views of the site from the visitor centre, where the sunsets can be incredible. There are 12km of trails, plus the transpennine trail which passes the nature park on the southern side. 

Latest blog posts

Read our blog

Share this

  • Facebook Facebook Created with Sketch.
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest

You might also be interested in

Starling murmurations

A murmuration of starlings is an amazing sight - a swooping mass of thousands of birds whirling in the sky above
Newly planted reedbed at Fairburn Ings RSPB reserve

Fairburn Ings

Fairburn Ings is an exciting site for family activities and serious wildlife watching.
Greenspace event St Andrews Park

Volunteer

You can volunteer for us in hundreds of ways. Explore these pages to find an opportunity that suits you.

We spend 90% of net income on conservation, public education and advocacy

Quick links

  • Contact us
  • Online Community
  • Vacancies
  • Media centre

Information for

  • Teachers
  • Policy makers
  • Farmers & landowners
  • Scientists

Our work in

  • England
  • Scotland
  • Wales
  • Northern Ireland
  • International

Follow us

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram

Partnering with

BirdLife_logo

The RSPB is a member of BirdLife International. Find out more about the partnership

Fundraising Regulator logo OSCR logo

© The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) is a registered charity: England and Wales no. 207076, Scotland no. SC037654

  • Terms & conditions
  • Cookie policy
  • Privacy policy
  • Charter and statutes
  • About our site
  • Modern Slavery Act

Cookie Preferences

Accepting all non-essential cookies helps us to personalise your experience

Edit settings
Accept all

Essential cookies are required

These cookies are required for basic web functions

Enable analytics cookies

Allow us to collect anonymised performance data

Enable marketing cookies

Allow us to personalise your experience

Save settings
Read our cookie policy