Stewardship

Eagle Scout Project Benefits Wildlands' Great Neck Conservation Area

By Amy Markarian, Senior Copywriter

Local Eagle Scout Ethan Nardone and his team of volunteers, along with the Southeastern Massachusetts and Cape Cod chapters of the New England Mountain Bike Association (NEMBA) installed an impressive 240 feet of bog boards at Great Neck Preserve, in Wareham this month! This 24-inch wide wooden “bridge” is designed to accommodate both hiking and mountain biking. It allows trail users to avoid mud and standing water, and limits the impact of pedestrian and bike traffic on the trail and surrounding environment.

Nardone planned the workday for his Eagle Scout Service Project, recruiting volunteers and fundraising for the project. NEMBA’s generous contributions provided both financial and physical support. In coordination with Wildlands’ Director of Stewardship, Erik Boyer, Nardone’s friends and family, biking team members from a local school, members of both NEMBA chapters, and Wildlands staff and volunteers spent the day carrying lumber and tools onto the trail, then assembling the bog boards on site.  

The new bog boards are a fantastic addition to the trail at Great Neck Preserve, and Wildlands is grateful to benefit from this outstanding collaboration!

Photo credit: SEMass NEMBA Chapter President, Tommy Walker


A Life Remembered: Memorial Bench Dedicated to Wildlands’ Volunteer at Halfway Pond Preserve

By Amy Markarian, Senior Copywriter

On October 15, a group of friends, family members, and Wildlands’ staff members gathered to celebrate the life of Wildlands’ volunteer, Pat O’Rourke.  It was a morning spent remembering a mother, grandmother, sister, and friend. Stories were traded over breakfast, and a hike through Halfway Pond Preserve led the group to a simple wooden bench overlooking a cherished view from the trail. There, a plaque was installed to dedicate the bench in Pat O’Rourke’s memory.

In the years before her death, Pat had been both a Wildlands Trust volunteer and an active member of the Friends of Halfway Pond hiking group. She spent countless hours enjoying nature and the company of friends on the same trails walked in her memory that morning. In 2019, one of Pat’s contributions to Wildlands had been to assist in carrying a volunteer-made wooden bench through the woods to its home along the trail. Its purpose was to provide a resting spot for visitors who traverse the hilly path--a place to pause and appreciate the scenic overlook of Halfway Pond. 

Pat had deeply valued Plymouth’s natural spaces and the community of friends who shared her enthusiasm for outdoor recreation. Her family recognized this and, after her passing, presented Wildlands Trust with a generous donation in her memory. As a token of Wildlands’ appreciation for Pat’s many contributions, and for the gift that was received from her loved ones, a memorial plaque was installed on the bench that she had carried, ensuring that her memory will continue to live on in the woods she so enjoyed.

At the dedication ceremony, Pat’s son Mike spoke in remembrance of his mother, as did Wildlands’ President and Executive Director, Karen Grey. Fellow volunteers and hiking friends Marilynn Atterbury and Betsy Hall also eulogized their friend and shared Robert Frost’s poem, “Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening,” which is quoted in the plaque’s inscription. Pat's brother Jack highlighted the synchronicity of his sister’s longstanding fondness for beech trees and the towering beech that shaded her bench with yellowing autumn leaves. At the close of the ceremony, participants followed the trail back out of the woods, reflecting on Frost’s words:

The woods are lovely, dark and deep.
But I have promises to keep.
And miles to go before I sleep.
And miles to go before I sleep.

For her friendship and commitment to our community, Wildlands gratefully remembers Pat O’Rourke.

Your Trash is Not Welcome Here!

By Amy Markarian, Senior Copywriter

You look outside your window and see the sun shining, a slight morning breeze cools the air. It’s a perfect day to stretch your legs on your favorite local conservation area trail. Fresh coffee in hand, you arrive with overwhelming appreciation for the beauty that abounds. You step out of your car and approach the trailhead and, in an instant, your splendid surroundings are transformed into a DUMP. 

This scenario, unfortunately, is not uncommon in southeastern Massachusetts. For years, local officials, private landowners, and conservation organizations have fought an uphill battle against illegal dumping on undeveloped land. Often, the items dumped on roadsides and in the woods are those that are either expensive to dispose of legally, require a special permit that may not be available to purchase on site (when items are already loaded in a vehicle and ready to be dropped off), or are considered hazardous waste items that are not routinely accepted at transfer stations. In at least some cases--based on where materials have been found-- it seems that polluters’ intentions may have been to properly dispose of the items. But, when doing so was discovered to be costly or inconvenient, a nearby open space was found to drop the load instead. Plymouth’s expanse of undeveloped lands and unmonitored road frontage, sadly, have historically made for easy dumping grounds in these situations. 

All too often, according to Wildlands Trust’s Director of Stewardship, Erik Boyer, “it seems, people view conservation land as an easy place to get rid of things.” Sometimes it’s malicious, sometimes it may not be, but it always has a negative impact on the land and those who use it. Because of the harmful implications for wildlife and water sources in areas where dumping takes place, Wildlands Trust is actively taking steps to deter polluters. 

In January, Wildlands' stewardship team was alerted to a massive pile of trash that had been left at one of our Plymouth preserves. Located close to a road in a town-managed cemetery, but within the boundaries of Wildlands’ adjacent conservation land, were 40 to 50 bags of household trash and various appliances left in a sprawling heap. The sheer quantity of debris to be removed made it clear that this was going to be a costly cleanup. However, it was discovered that several items had attached mailing labels containing one person’s name and address. 

Our stewardship team notified the Plymouth Police, and an investigation led to criminal charges being filed against the responsible party. MA General Law - Part IV, Title I, Chapter 270, Section 16, states:

“Whoever places, throws, deposits, or discharges...trash, bottles or cans, refuse, rubbish, garbage, debris, scrap, waste or other material of any kind on a public highway or within 20 yards of a public highway, or on any other public land, or in or upon coastal or inland waters...or within 20 yards of such waters, or on property of another, or on lands dedicated for open space purposes, including lands subject to conservation restrictions and agricultural preservation restrictions...shall be punished by a fine of not more than $5,500 for the first offense and a fine not to exceed $15,000 for each subsequent offense…”*

In this case, where the responsible party was identified, charges were pressed and the law was utilized to ensure that the burden of time and expenses associated with the cleanup would not be shouldered by a non-profit conservation organization. The Plymouth County District Attorney’s office is currently seeking restitution from the offender for the costs associated with Wildlands’ safe removal of all of the items.

Wildlands Trust hopes that this situation will serve as a reminder to others that dumping is illegal, it is detrimental to our land, water supply, and wildlife, and it will not be tolerated. We will continue to work collaboratively with the Plymouth Police Department to ensure that our community’s natural spaces remain beautiful and safe for all.

(*https://malegislature.gov/Laws/GeneralLaws/PartIV/TitleI/Chapter270/Section16)

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Kingston Dam to be Removed Using State-Awarded Funds

By Amy Markarian, Senior Copywriter

KINGSTON– On July 28, Wildlands Trust received a $729,000 state grant to remove the Sylvia Place Pond dam in Kingston, MA. The award will allow the conservation group to improve public safety in the area and to restore fish passage by conducting a breach of this significant hazard, poor-condition dam.

Governor Charlie Baker announced the 2021 Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs Dam and Seawall Program grant recipients from Gloucester’s Haskell Pond Dam on Wednesday. 28 grantees, including the conservation group and 27 cities and towns across Massachusetts, will receive more than $17 million to help repair failing dams, seawalls, and levees. Since the grant program’s inception in 2013, more than $95 million have been provided to address the state’s aging structures.

Wildlands Trust’s Executive Director, Karen Grey, says, “We have to be concerned with how severe storm activity is taking a toll on aging infrastructure. With this funding we can now eliminate the growing public safety issues to residents living downstream of this dam.”

Sylvia Place Pond is nearly surrounded by Wildlands Trust’s 27-acre Stewart/Person Preserve, in Kingston. The Sylvia Place Pond Dam has outlived its usefulness as an historic impoundment for mill power and ice harvesting. It is part of a series of interconnected manmade ponds that were originally constructed to supply power to nearby mills. There is a herring ladder at the north end of the pond that allows fish to complete their annual trek upstream for spawning in nearby Russell Pond. The area is also home to such wildlife as red fox, otter, mink, deer, osprey, and great blue heron.

Wildlands Trust is a non-profit organization dedicated to conserving land and preserving the natural heritage of Southeastern Massachusetts. The organization works to permanently protect and steward important habitats and landscapes, including woodlands and fields, ponds, coastal areas, agricultural lands, and river systems. Founded in 1973, Wildlands Trust has worked to protect nearly 13,000 acres of open space in 48 Massachusetts towns.

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Many Hands Make Light Work

By President & Executive Director Karen Grey

Stewarding conservation land is messy, hard work, especially when a parcel has been neglected and stewards are called upon to clean up years of misuse, overgrowth and dumping. These types of projects require the good cheer, know-how and efficiencies brought to bear by a team of can-do people, such as the group that convened on May 15, 2021 to revitalize a parcel in Yarmouth recently protected by the Native Land Conservancy (NLC).

Founded in 2012 in Mashpee, NLC is the first Native-run land conservation group east of the Mississippi. Its mission is to preserve healthy landscapes for all living things and to help restore land to its natural state. As a developing land trust, NLC relies on volunteers for stewardship work, and Wildlands was happy to send a few members of our A-Team (Owen Grey, Marilynn Atterbury, and Rob MacDonald), along with our truck and tools, to assist with the set-up of this 11-acre parcel on Cape Cod. 

As time and resources allow, Wildlands is committed to helping other, less-resourced land trusts in any way we can.