Wildlands Starts the New Year with a Return to Remote Activities

By Amy Markarian, Senior Copywriter

The start of a new calendar year provides an opportunity for us to reflect on the previous year's successes and challenges, and look ahead with hope to new goals and plans for the year to come. As we reported in our Fall/Winter 2021 Newsletter, Wildlands Trust ended 2021 with much excitement about the addition of our new staff members, and we had optimistically begun a post-Covid return to in-person programming.

However, if there's one thing we've learned in the last two years, it is that thriving under challenging circumstances requires both an ability to adapt and a willingness to change! This month, in response to the surge in Covid-19 cases in Southeastern Massachusetts, Wildlands Trust made the decision to, once again, reduce our in-person interactions until it is safer for the members of our community to be together.

At this time, Wildlands' staff members are working in a hybrid model, utilizing both remote work and scheduled time in the office as needed, and our board meetings are being conducted remotely until further notice. Additionally, all indoor programming has been canceled or moved outdoors. In order to keep our community connected and our members active throughout another challenging winter, Wildlands' programming team is working hard to increase outdoor and virtual program options. Please be sure to check our website and social media pages regularly to stay up-to-date with the latest information about upcoming events!

We've done this before, and we can do it again! Wildlands Trust is committed to weathering the world's changing circumstances with you, and we will (again) look forward to seeing each other in-person soon!

Oh, What Fun It Is to Ride!

By Amy Markarian, Senior Copywriter

On Sunday, December 5, Wildlands teamed up with the New England Mountain Bike Association (NEMBA) for a festive, holiday-themed bike ride in Plymouth. Jingle Bell Ride participants chose either a 10-mile intermediate route through Halfway Pond Preserve or a shorter beginners’ course through Emery Preserve East. The event was well attended, with 20 revelrous riders decked out in their holiday best. The two groups completed their rides in approximately 90 minutes, then returned to Wildlands' headquarters at Davis-Douglas Farm, where they gathered by an outdoor fire and enjoyed post-ride refreshments in front of the Conservation Barn. 

Organized mountain bike rides are new to Wildlands’ events calendar, but with our new Programs & Outreach Coordinator Claire Johnston’s thumb on the pulse of the local biking scene, we can expect to see more to come! This winter, our growing collaboration with NEMBA has led to the installation of hundreds of feet of new bog boards at Wildlands’ preserves, and has attracted enthusiastic new participants to the Wildlands community. NEMBA is known throughout Massachusetts for their exemplary trail stewardship and multi-use trail knowledge. The Wildlands team enjoyed introducing such a responsible group of mountain bikers to our trail system!

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.

Programming is Back!

By Amy Markarian, Senior Copywriter

Say hello (again) to the Conservation Barn at Davis-Douglas Farm and our new Programs & Outreach Manager, Claire Johnston 

As we say goodbye to summer on the South Shore, we look forward to an exciting fall filled with programs. Along with the rest of the world, Wildlands’ programming team took a step back from in-person events in 2020 due to COVID-19. But now, with safety precautions in place, we are excited to resume—and expand—our programs!

In late September, the board of directors at Wildlands Trust approved the re-opening of our Conservation Barn for events. There will be a cap on the number of attendees allowed at each event, determined by the nature of the activity. All participants will be required to follow Wildlands’ COVID-19 guidelines and fill out corresponding safety agreements. With these protocols in place, we are optimistic that programming will be able to continue, despite the dropping temperatures looming just around the corner. We can’t wait to welcome members back into our community gathering space! Keep an eye on our website for lots of upcoming classes and events! 

And, with so many activities filling the calendar this fall, Wildlands is also thrilled to welcome our new Programs & Outreach Manager, Claire Johnston. Claire joins Wildlands Trust from Seattle Washington, where she has spent the last 4 years working in the Outdoor Industry. She is passionate about community engagement and loves exploring. She is an avid mountain biker, hiker, climber, skier, and more! If you have any programming questions, concerns, or ideas, she is available at cjohnston@wildlandstrust.org, or (774)343-5124, ext.108, and she’d love to hear from you!