Welney and the Washes were also the centres of ice skating in England with Welney boasting a World champion and several British champions the skaters being depicted on the village sign.
Surrounded by the black peat fens Welney is in a very rich area of agriculture with many different crops grown from the common cereals such as Wheat and Barley to the more unusual crops like Lavender and Thyme and of course the king of autumn crops the pumpkin.
The parish church of St Mary is worth a stop, it was constructed in 1848 from Norfolk Carrstone, it has a Victorian Gothic design and is set in a long narrow graveyard next to a large water tower on the main street that runs through the village.
The village did have a nice primary school but it was closed a few years back, the building still stands empty. There are no shops in the village now and there is one remaining public house, Lamb & Flag which has a very popular restaurant serving both hot and cold meals along with traditional ales supplied by the local brewery, Elgoods. The Lamb & Flag is situated on the main street making it an ideal stop off point for cyclists with friendly staff and a nice beer garden. I must have cycled through Welney hundreds of times over the last two years some when the frost lay on the black soil, some when mist hung over the river and many when the warm fen sunshine lit those huge blue skies every time I think of those hard fen tigers who lived off the Washes and all they produced. How different their world must have been, the cold, the wet and every day struggle to place food upon the table I read of these hard folk who lived such lives and understand fully why they had the name "Fen Tigers"
Beautiful sunshine .......... looks so peaceful
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