The Franklin Land Trust has placed 93 acres in Colrain under a conservation restriction. Credit: CONTRIBUTED

Between properties in Colrain and Leverett, the Franklin Land Trust has placed conservation restrictions on a total of 139 acres.

Alain Peteroy, deputy director of the Franklin Land Trust, said conservation restrictions will help preserve critical farmland and wildlife habitats, and the trust is always happy to assist private landowners or small land trusts in conservation efforts.

“If we’re helping their mission, we’re helping our mission,” Peteroy said.

Colrain

Last month, the trust assisted Colrain resident Judson DeCew with protecting 93 acres across three parcels along Ed Clark Road and Hillman Road. With help from the Deerfield River Chapter of Trout Unlimited, which received a $5,000 grant from the Trout Unlimited Land Conservancy Fund, the land trust conducted a survey of the property and placed a conservation restriction on it.

According to the Franklin Land Trust, the conservation restriction will preserve 9 acres of working hayfields and 84 acres of forest. This includes 1 mile of Tissdell Brook, a coldwater fisheries resource that flows into the west branch of the North River, providing a habitat for brook trout and other wildlife.

“By helping preserve that land, that river will be maintained as a habitat for the trout,” Peteroy said.

DeCew said he has lived in many different places over the years, including South America, Florida and Boston, and he always dreamed of having a home in rural New England. He found that dream in Colrain, and first purchased property in town in 1999.

“I had always wanted my little piece of New England, and used to spend a lot of time fishing and wandering through the countryside,” DeCew said in a statement. “I remember walking out into the pasture area thatโ€™s behind the barn and house. … I fell immediately in love.”

DeCew said he wanted to conserve the property to do his part in preventing rural landscapes from shrinking and being developed.

“Iโ€™ve always had a sensitivity and a concern for the character of the countryside,” DeCew said. “I know you canโ€™t keep everything as it is now, or put it back to the way it was. But I always knew if I had the chance, I would do what I could to conserve a piece. And this piece was attractive, given its position in a little valley, given the stream running down through it.”

According to the land trust, “much of the property has been identified as Prime Farmland or Farmland of Statewide Importance, and two-thirds of it is designated as Critical Natural Landscape under the stateโ€™s BioMap3 program.” Additionally, “its forest soils are classified as Prime Forest Soils.”

Peteroy said the property will remain privately owned and maintained. The hayfields have been maintained by a neighboring farm for years. She added that the forested land is in close proximity to H.O. Cook State Forest and is also near the Franklin Land Trustโ€™s Crowningshield Conservation Area, “helping to form a corridor linking protected habitats along the west branch of the North River.”

Leverett

The land trust also assisted the Rattlesnake Gutter Trust in conserving two adjoining properties in Leverett, the Whitney Road Conservation Area and the Marvell Family Conservation Area. Combined, the 46 acres form the Rattlesnake Gutter, a glacial ravine with hiking and biking trails.

โ€œBack in the late 1980s, a 40-acre parcel that encompassed a large part of the ravine was about to be sold,โ€ Rattlesnake Gutter trustee Eva Gibavic said in a statement. โ€œA number of people came together to make sure it was saved. We helped raise money for the town to buy that property, and that was really the beginning.โ€

Preserving the land ensures the public can continue to enjoy the hiking trails and historic sites on the property, including the remnants of a stone cellar hole.

โ€œThereโ€™s a historic cellar hole on the parcel, and unlike many that are hidden away and not easily accessible, this one is on a trail that people can actually access and enjoy. That was of real interest to us,โ€ Gibavic said.

Preserving the land in Leverett ensures the public can continue to enjoy the hiking trails and historic sites on the property, including the remnants of a stone cellar hole. Credit: CONTRIBUTED

While the Rattlesnake Gutter Trust has no plans to sell or develop the property, it wanted to permanently conserve the land in case the trust was ever disbanded.

“We knew that if [the Rattlesnake Gutter Trust] ever disbanded, the land we owned could be sold for development because they werenโ€™t under [a conservation restriction],” Gibavic said. “We felt very strongly that it should never happen. These places were meant to be protected.”

Peteroy said the Franklin Land Trust was happy to support Rattlesnake Gutter Trust, and the conservation restriction was supported with $2,500 from the Wharton Trust. She said that, similarly to the Colrain property, the trust will maintain ownership of the land. However, unlike in Colrain, the property is open to the public with popular trails.

“Partnering with a small land trust is the right move for us,” Peteroy said. “This way, the land is double protected.”

For more information, visit franklinlandtrust.org.

Madison Schofield is the Greenfield beat reporter. She graduated from George Mason University, where she studied communications and journalism. She can be reached at 413-930-4429 or mschofield@recorder.com.