Weantinoge Trust adds 300 acres to NW Corner’s protected lands

The Weantinoge Heritage Land Trust has announced the permanent preservation of more than 300 acres of significant land in the Northwest Corner. Arrangements were completed in 2011.“We are thrilled with the foresight of these land owners for realizing the importance of protecting open space and wildlife habitat in northwest Connecticut and commend Weantinoge Heritage for facilitating the process,” said Scott Heth, director of the Sharon Audubon Center and a Lakeville Journal columnist. “Each of these projects serves to expand protected corridors of habitat so important to many species of birds whose population continue to be in decline.”The Weantinoge trust is the largest land trust in Connecticut. Founded in 1965, it works in 17 communities in the northwest part of the state. Weantinoge is a member of the Litchfield Hills Greenprint Collaborative (a partnership of 24 local and regional conservation organizations sponsored by the Housatonic Valley Association).Three of the major projects are in Sharon and Salisbury. In Sharon, Barbara and Mortimer Klaus donated a 106-acre conservation easement to Weantinoge. The Klaus Preserve is located on Sharon Mountain adjacent to the Housatonic State Forest. It features diverse woodlands, wetlands and streams that drain directly into the Housatonic River. The easement adds to an 8-mile-long protected wildlife corridor from Salisbury to Cornwall Bridge that encompasses more than 8,000 acres.Richard Revesz and Vicki Been have donated a 40-acre forever-wild easement in Salisbury that connects with a 25-acre easement they had previously donated. Forever-wild easements protect native forests from logging and enable native trees to survive for their entire natural lifespan. The expanded sanctuary protects a significant portion of Brinton Hill that rises from the western bank of the Housatonic River to the north of Lime Rock. It features mixed upland forestland, extensive stone walls and exposed ridges and summits with views of the Housatonic River near its confluence with the Salmon Kill. “The Revesz-Been Preserve ranks among Weantinoge’s finest,” explained Harry White, Weantinoge’s ecologist and director of land conservation. “The woodlands are wild and native and lie in a setting that feels remarkably remote. It is a stunning, inspiring place. The inclusion of a highly visible ridgeline, which will never be developed or logged, is perhaps the highest community value accomplished in the transaction.”In Sharon, the Zucker family donated an 81-acre conservation easement on Indian Mountain. The preserve features a mix of farmland and forest and includes fields, outcrops, open woodlands, three ponds and a stream that flows toward Mudge Pond. It contains a diverse set of habitats that support American kestrels, prairie warblers, whippoorwills, black bears and bobcats.Weantinoge has also partnered with Gregory Ostling and Angela Tu to protect a 28-acre farm and forest parcel on East Street in Sharon. The gift protects more than 10 acres of hayfields along with upland and lowland woodlands and 14 acres of forever-wild forest. The preserve also protects more than 1,000 feet of brook, as well as swamp and marsh habitats.

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