Ancaster Valley
A steep sided valley covered with limestone grassland, scrub and woodland. It is one of the finest sites for limestone flowers in the country.
Matthew Roberts
Ancaster ValleyÂ
Anderby Marsh
Arnold's Meadow
Banovallum House
Barrow Blow Wells
Barrow Haven Reedbed
Baston Fen
Bloxholm Wood
Boston Road Brick Pits
Bottleneck and Jackson's Meadows
Boultham Mere
Candlesby Hill Quarry
Chapel Pit
Clapgate Pits
Crowle Moor
Dawson City Clay Pits
Deeping Lakes
Digby Corner
Dole Wood
Donna Nook
Duke's Covert and Copper Hill
Fairfield Pit
Far Ings
Fir Hill Quarry
Fiskerton Fen
Frampton Marsh
Friskney Decoy Wood
Furze Hill
Gibraltar Point
Goslings Corner Wood
Great Casterton Road Banks
Greetwell Hollow
Hatton Meadows
Haxey Turbary
Heath's Meadows
Hopland's Wood
Horbling Line
Huttoft Bank Pit
Keal Carr
Killingholme Haven Pits
Kingerby Beck Meadows
Kirkby Gravel Pits
Kirkby Moor
Langholme Wood
Lawn Wood, Bottleneck and Jackson's
Legbourne Wood
Linwood Warren
Messingham Sand Quarry
Mill Hill Quarry
Moor Closes
Moor Farm
Moulton Marsh
Muckton Wood
Pasture Wharf
Pickering's Meadow
Pinchbeck Fen Slipe
Porter’s Lodge Meadows
Rauceby Warren
Red Hill
Rigsby Wood
Robert's Field
Roughton Moor Wood
Rush Furlong
Saltfleetby-Theddlethorpe Dunes
Sandilands Pit
Scotton Common
Sedge Hole Close
Silverines Meadow
Snipe Dales
Sotby Meadows
South Witham Verges
Sow Dale
Spendluffe Meadows
Stanton's Pit
Surfleet Lows
Swinn Wood
Tetney Blow Wells
The Shrubberies
Thurlby Fen Slipe
Toby's Hill
Toft Tunnel
Tortoiseshell Woods and Meadows
Tunman Wood
Watts Wood
Welton-le-Wold
Whisby Nature Park
Willoughby Branch Line
Willoughby Meadow
Willow Tree Fen
Wolla Bank Pit
Wolla Bank Reedbed
Woodhall Spa Airfield
A steep sided valley covered with limestone grassland, scrub and woodland. It is one of the finest sites for limestone flowers in the country.
Known as Anderby Marsh, it will be transformed over time into a wildlife haven of traditional coastal grazing marsh and reedbed.
A hay meadow and ponds, bounded by woodland and mature hedgerow.
The grounds of Banovallum House include a wildlife garden, a walled garden and about 200m of river bank.
The reserve consists of reedmarsh and woodland with two blow wells, which are natural artesian springs.
One of the most important of the series of disused flooded clay pits on the Humber Bank.
Baston fen is a long tract of permanent pasture, which is flooded in winter and attracts large numbers of wildfowl.
An ash-dominated semi-natural woodland in the arable south-west Lincolnshire landscape.
The reserve comprises part of an area of old clay pits with grassland, reed beds, ponds and orchard.
An attractive lake with beds of reed and sedge, and emergent vegetation.