Due to the impermeable tonalite soils, the Lovrenška lakes were formed in bowl-shaped hollows, from which water cannot penetrate into the ground. There are 21 lakes, sometimes even fewer, depending on the extent and durability of the standing water; lakes are restored only by rainfall. They are up to 120 cm deep. Peat bogs with lakes are about a kilometer long and up to 350 m wide. It lies in the Lovrenška jezera forest reserve, which stretches from Mulejev to Jezerski vrh. A low spruce and pine forest grows in the surroundings, and pine under the lakes. Here we also find rare plants: various sedges, rusty sleet, hairy and bare moss, wild rosemary, carnivorous round-leaved sundew and some others. Ruševje is the habitat of ruševje and kljunačev. On the southern side of the lakes, the Institute for the Protection of Monuments in Maribor erected a lookout tower in 1990 and arranged a path to the first lakes via bridges. From the tower there is a beautiful view of the lake plateau and the Pohorje ridge to the east and west. A folk tale says that the lake is home to the flood man Jezernik; if we rock him with calm water, he takes revenge on us with a storm.