Frost riverfront parcel is protected

SHARON — The Sharon Land Trust (SLT) and The Housatonic Valley Association (HVA) have closed on the purchase of a conservation easement on 20 acres of riverfront farm owned by Denny Frost. “My [late] wife, Charlotte, would be supremely happy to see this land conserved,” Frost said. “We started talking about the possibility of preserving the riverfront meadows with [HVA Executive Director] Lynn Werner many years ago.”Charlotte (Gay) Frost died in April 2009.“The Frost property has 1,480 feet of river frontage and is extraordinarily beautiful,” Werner said.The Newman’s Own Foundation provided financial support to make the easement possible. Also partnering in the project were the Cornwall Conservation Trust; the Natural Resource Damages Trustees including the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection, the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; and individual donors to the land trust and HVA. Funds from the Natural Resource Damages Trustees have also been set aside for both organizations (SLT and HVA) to work together to conserve another nearby riverfront parcel.According to SLT President Larry Power, the importance of the property goes far beyond aesthetics. He said, “The 20-acre Frost farmland includes a very rare and environmentally important kettle pond, which was formed as glaciers retreated and resulted in a depression which exposed the water table to the surface. Kettle ponds have no defined inlet or outlet, and no fish. As a result, like vernal pools, they are host to a myriad of amphibians including woodland frogs and salamanders.” HVA reported the kettle pond in Sharon is environmentally important because it marks the presence of a defined stratified drift aquifer that is hydraulically connected to the Housatonic River. According to Star Childs of Ecological and Environmental Consultancy Services, the water found in stratified aquifers is naturally filtered and purified as it passes through sand and gravel, thus ensuring high quality discharge to the river.The conservation easement purchased on the Frost property includes creation of a low impact footpath along the waterfront. This augments about five miles of nearby riverfront land already conserved by HVA, government agencies and others.This project began in late 2006 when the SLT and HVA jointly submitted an application for a Natural Resource Damage Fund grant. This fund was originally set aside as part of the consent decree between the federal Environmental Protection Agency and GE outlining the terms of PCB contamination cleanup affecting the Housatonic River system. The SLT and the HVA were awarded $705,000 in 2010 for both the Frost farm easement and another riverfront parcel.

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