When the inland ice melted 10,000 years ago it turned colder for a few centuries. The ice therefore didn’t melt. Large rivers in the ice and broken off icebergs, with the help of gravel and sand, formed a hilly landscape, a so called kame landscape. A mixture of gravel ridges, hills, moraine ridges, eskers and plateaus frame valleys, often with a lake or a marsh.
The landscape is also very varied, in that meadows, grazing land and arable land intermingle with lakes and broad-leaved deciduous forest.
On a small area, around 1100 ha, are actually six nature reserves with varying floras and faunas. Old cultivated land with pastureland, clearance cairns and stone walls, groves with broad-leaved trees, lime-rich fens with orchids, colourful flower meadows, and peaceful fishing lakes...