Reading Today

Get back to nature thanks to Uni’s new trail

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AS ANY student who attends the University of Reading can testify, the lecture rooms and halls of residence are set in some beautiful grounds.

They include the Harris Gardens and Whiteknigh­ts Lake.

And to make the most of it, the University has unveiled a new nature trail, giving evenyone the chance to enjoy the splendours of Mother Nature.

Self-guided, it is marked by a series of signs around some of the notable habitats on the Whiteknigh­ts campus.

Each sign has a unique QR code which directs the walker to a URL with more informatio­n about the habitat and the species that can be found there.

Nature lovers can get lost in the Wilderness, feed the ducks that call Whiteknigh­ts Lake home, look out for butterflie­s on the Meadows and bees on the Pollinator Lawns, visit the Rewilding Area to see the change over time and enjoy a picnic on the Wooded Meadows.

The trail takes around

30 minutes and can be completed as a circular walk, starting and finishing close to central campus bars and cafes, or visited in sections.

Professor Mark Fellowes, ProVice Chancellor (Academic Planning & Resource), says: “Whiteknigh­ts Campus is a haven for wildlife in urban Reading. Colleagues across the University have ensured that it has stayed this way, and given the biodiversi­ty crisis these green oases become ever more important.

“We hope that this new trail will help staff, students and the local community engage even more with the nature that surrounds them every day.”

The signs were funded by the Friends of the University of Reading and were designed by Gaia Zwiers-Mortier, a final year Zoology student.

 ?? ?? WALK: Whiteknigh­ts Lake is one of the destinatio­ns on the nature trail Picture: University of Reading
WALK: Whiteknigh­ts Lake is one of the destinatio­ns on the nature trail Picture: University of Reading

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