High School Woodworking with Wildlands

On Friday, March 23, 15 high school seniors from Rising Tide Charter Public School in Plymouth took part in a bat box and bench building project hosted by Wildlands at our headquarters. This volunteer event was one of several attended by students as part of an annual Rising Tide field trip day involving community service.

Seniors at Rising Tide build bat homes and benches for Wildlands Trust properties.

Seniors at Rising Tide build bat homes and benches for Wildlands Trust properties.

Students were given pre-cut pieces of wood and constructed the boxes and benches using power drills. In just over 3 hours, we were able to finish building two benches and 12 bat boxes, and they all came out beautifully! The benches and bat boxes will be installed on several Wildlands preserves at a later date. Before we install the boxes, however, we will paint their exteriors -- bats like a warm environment, so a dark paint will help retain heat.

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Thank you, Rising Tide, the project was a huge success and we absolutely loved having you!

It's Tree Planting Season!

By Tommy Blanchard, TerraCorps Land Stewardship Coordinator

The City of Brockton has been selected to receive 2,400 free trees to be planted for environmental health and energy efficiency as a part of the Greening the Gateway Cities Program (GGCP), and we here at Wildlands are gearing up for the spring planting season! Planting trees in urban areas has many beneficial effects, from lowering energy usage and costs, to decreasing noise pollution, to improving air and water quality and reducing pollution, and much more – thanks, Science! So far, around 500 trees have been planted through this program, and the GGCP aims to plant all 2,400 trees in the identified area (below) before the end of 2019. In order to meet this goal, we must plant about 1,000 more this year and another 1,000 in 2019. We need your help to make this happen! Please share this with anyone you know who lives in the area of Brockton shown below. We have lots of trees that need loving homes!

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Tree Planting Area

Greening the Gateway Cities, Brockton, MA

“We have over 40 different species of trees that the homeowner gets to choose from,” says DCR's Community and Urban Forester Matt Dyer. “The trees are free. The labor is free. This is truly a free program. We just ask that the residents water the trees after we plant them so the trees will survive.”

To request your free trees, call 617-626-1503 and leave your name, address, and phone number. For more information, visit wildlandstrust.org/greening-the-gateway-cities.

In addition, we are looking for GGCP volunteers! If you are looking to help a great cause and engage with members of a diverse and vibrant community, please email Tommy Blanchard at tblanchard@wildlandstrust.org to inquire about open volunteer positions, and learn more at wildlandstrust.org/volunteer-with-ggc.

And don’t forget to like/follow our Facebook and Instagram pages to keep up with the latest GGCP news!

Facebook: facebook.com/GGCBrockton/

Instagram: instagram.com/ggcbrockton/

Trees are planted on public and private lands at absolutely no cost. Volunteers help plant this tree in a Brockton park!

Trees are planted on public and private lands at absolutely no cost. Volunteers help plant this tree in a Brockton park!

The Greening the Gateway Cities Program is a state funded initiative to plant trees in urban neighborhoods throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Greening the Gateway Cities in Brockton is executed in collaboration with the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation.

Green Team 2018 - Recruitment Begins!

We're looking for local teens ages 12 - 18 who are interested in environmental learning and volunteerism to apply for Wildlands Trust's Green Team this summer! 

Green Team crewmembers get a summer experience like no other! Crewmembers work primarily outdoors while acquiring new skills and knowledge about conservation, agriculture, wildlife, and water resources.

With two different age groups, there's an opportunity for any middle or high school aged student in Southeastern Massachusetts to join Green Team. For ages 12 - 14, Green Team I is a one-week, four-day introductory volunteer program. For ages 15 - 18, Green Team II is a two-week, six-day internship program with an overnight campout. 

Not sure if Green Team is right for you? Learn more about it from Wildlands staff and last summer's Green Team members themselves in this video:

Learn More and Apply:

Storm Damage on the Trails

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Mother Nature is not messing around this month! In the first two weeks of March, we've seen record high winds, extensive power outages, and today we've already acquired a foot of wet, heavy snow in Plymouth. While this current storm is providing great snowshoeing and cross country skiing conditions on Wildlands Trust trails, it may also bring fallen trees and branches and possible flooding along rivers and wetlands. If you're out enjoying our properties today or during any inclement weather, please be mindful of the potential danger that high winds bring in the forest. 

With another storm in the forecast for next week, we continue to work hard to keep up with trail maintenance and plowing. Our stewardship crew has been working daily to clear trails of debris from last weekend's storm and will continue to do their best to clean up the trails and plow parking lots at our showcase preserves.

If you're out on our trails, please let us know about any damage you come across by emailing Stewardship Manager Erik Boyer at eboyer@wildlandstrust.org. Photos are always helpful as well! 

Interested in helping to regularly monitor a Wildlands Trust preserve? You can volunteer to Adopt A Preserve by walking the trails monthly! Learn more: wildlandstrust.org/volunteer

A True Piece of Americana Saved in Dighton

In early January, the Town of Dighton acquired a piece of living history: an 8.5-acre parcel comprised primarily of open fields, situated off of Council Oak Way. 

Although not large in scale, the subject property nonetheless possesses an abundance of agricultural, water supply, historical, and cultural values that recommended it as a high priority for preservation.  It has been in active agricultural use for centuries, and contains prime farmland soils as designated by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 

It directly abuts and buffers the town-owned Council Oak property and another town-owned property to the north, and is proximate to other parcels that are either protected or targets for protection, including several parcels owned by a local farmer. It is contained within an area identified by the state’s Department of Conservation and Recreation as a “Priority Heritage Landscape”.  The Heritage Landscape designation was afforded only to those landscapes possessed of outstanding historical and cultural significance.  Although this designation was focused specifically on the Town’s Council Oak preserve, it also speaks to the archeological and historical significance of the larger area including the subject property.  

The subject property is contained within a Zone II Watershed Protection Area as identified by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection.  The Somerset Water District owns a sizable adjacent tract that provides a buffer zone for a drinking water well located approximately 800 ft. to the north of the subject property. 

Roger Desrosiers, "Grey Fox"

Roger Desrosiers, "Grey Fox"

Wildlands Trust first became aware of the property’s significance in 2012 through Roger and Donna Desrosiers, with whom we serve on the Taunton Wild and Scenic River Stewardship Council (the body that implements the stewardship plan associated with the river’s designation as a National Wild and Scenic River in 2009).  Roger (Grey Fox) and Donna (Spirit Fox) are also members of a local Native American group, the Dighton Intertribal Council.  They advised that the property’s owner, G. Lopes Inc., had announced intentions to remove gravel from the site, precipitating great concern among conservation advocates, historical preservationists, and the Intertribal Council. 

Roger and Donna educated us and many others about the significance, and the sacredness, of the property and the surrounding landscape to local Native Americans.  It was used and occupied for over 8,000 years up into colonial times, and once supported as many as nine Native American villages.  Under the mighty Council Oak itself, the sachem Massasoit made the decision to assist the recently arrived and struggling Pilgrims, and later signed an agreement conveying what is now Dighton to European settlers.  In the present day, local Native Americans consider the Council Oak property and surrounding properties, including the subject property, as an essential component of their heritage. 

In partnership with Roger and Donna and Environmental Program Director Bill Napolitano of SRPEDD, the Taunton-based regional planning agency, Wildlands initiated efforts in 2012 to preserve the land, helping to negotiate a potential sales price and securing a substantial funding commitment from the Dighton Community Preservation Committee in 2013.  But finding the remaining funds needed to close the deal proved challenging, and our preservation effort was shelved for several years. 

Roger and Donna’s fervent commitment to protecting this critical part of the region’s heritage never wavered during the intervening years, even when the prospects of a successful outcome appeared bleak.  In addition to Roger and Donna also kept open a line of communication with the Lopes family, and continually reaffirmed our collective interest in achieving a preservation outcome for the land. 

In 2017, the landowner made it clear that he would seek a final resolution of the property’s future—it was preservation or some combination of gravel extraction and residential development.  With this imperative looming, Bill suggested a heretofore unexplored strategy:  utilize mitigation monies set aside in the early 2000’s to compensate for the loss of state-designated prime farmland in neighboring Taunton that was converted into an industrial park.  These mitigation monies had sat untouched for over a decade, and awaited creative use to help preserve high-quality farmland at risk of conversion.  With this in mind, Bill received approval from the Massachusetts Executive Office of Environmental Affairs and the Mass. Department of Agricultural Resources to allocate $150,000 of the mitigation monies to the project. 

The Dighton Conservation Commission came up with the additional $150,000 needed to close the deal. 

The Town of Dighton now owns the land, which will remain in active agricultural production in perpetuity. 

Many thanks to Bill for his persistence and creative suggestion to pursue the mitigation funds, and to the Lopes family for granting us an extended window to consummate a purchase.  We also wish to extend particular thanks to Roger and Donna for their invaluable assistance and unceasing dedication to achieving this long-sought preservation outcome.  We at Wildlands Trust share their happiness with this outcome, and are pleased to have had a role in helping to facilitate the property’s preservation.