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Tetney Blow Wells


a blow well at Tetney
Tetney Blow Wells is a nature reserve that is designated a Site of Special Scientific Interest. It is usually not open to the public. The images on this page were taken during the 2007 Lincolnshire Wolds Walking Festival, one of the rare instances that the gates were open. It's not difficult to see why it is normally closed: the reserve contains a number of areas of deep water, which feature bold signs forbidding swimming and outlining the dangers of drowning, entrapment, or contracting Weil's disease. It's not the kind of place that would be safe for families with small children to visit on a regular basis.

However, this relative isolation has allowed nature to thrive here. Pictured below is a cardinal beetle, one of the many insect species to make its home at Tetney Blow Wells. Bird life includes swans and ducks.

Cardinal Beetle
The wet land makes a good environment for plant life as well. Of course there is willow, and various grasses such as pond sedge grow well in the damp conditions.

Blow wells occur where underground water escapes through the chalk through a weakness in the boulder clay above it, reaching the surface under pressure.

pond sedge
blow well


Tetney Blow Wells Image Gallery

More about Tetney




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