Willowemoc: Our First Conservation Easements

On December 11, 1995, Delaware Highlands Conservancy received our first conservation easements: 158 acres of exceptional lands bordering Willowemoc Creek. The easements will help to forever protect this renowned trout stream and the surrounding natural areas from development.

The Willowemoc easements were first created in 1989 by the Willowemoc Land Conservancy. Director Herb Heaton established the Willowemoc Conservancy to hold the easements on his 112 acres and the neighboring 46 acres owned by Mr. and Mrs. Myron Friedman. The Heatons and Friedmans were the only members of the Conservancy, but they hoped to enlist more landowners to protect other properties along the Willowemoc. Unfortunately, that did not happen.

 

The Willowemoc Land Conservancy sought out the Conservancy after an extensive search, for an appropriate organization to hold the easements when the Heatons moved to Arizona. We were honored to accept these easements, and used them to help publicize the values of conservation easements along the trout stream to landowners and to the communities bordering the Willowemoc and the Beaverkill. There is presently little zoning in place to ensure protection of these prized waters that are vulnerable to damage from silt and pollution that can follow development too close to the streams.

 

The stated purpose of these easements is "to protect in perpetuity the natural and open space character of the protected property." Cutting trees, clearing and grading land, constructing roads and buildings within 200 feet of the bank of the Willowemoc are prohibited. However, new structures are permitted on the rest of the land. In fact, these easements permit the equivalent of 15-acre zoning. Other conditions provide for reasonable uses of the land while at the same time protecting the environmental quality of these particular forests, fields, and streams.

 

Our thanks to Herb and Olga Heaton and to Mr. and Mrs. Myron Friedman for entrusting these beautiful lands to our care and getting the Conservancy off to a great start. We always do our best to achieve our conservation mission here along the western watershed of the Catskills, and we will work with the new landowners to ensure that the conditions of these easements are respected.

 

By Barbara Yeaman

Delaware Highlands Conservancy - Landowner Stories

Journey's End Farm: A Gift to the Community

Ralph and Marie posing for a picture at their conserved farm in Newfoundland, Wayne County, Pennsylvania.On November 20, 1997 Marie and Ralph Curtis took action that will profoundly affect the future of their farm. They signed a conservation easement and donated it to the Delaware Highlands Conservancy, ensuring the land they love will forever remain as it is today.

Ralph and Marie purchased their farm in 1982 and as they worked the land, they watched the approach of suburban development moving north from the Poconos. Fearing the same fate would one day threaten their own farm, Ralph Curtis approached DHC to ask our assistance in drafting a conservation easement that would in effect forego their (or any future owner's) right to subdivide the farm. Curious about their reasons for doing this?

 

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The Delaware Highlands Conservancy, in partnership with Sullivan Renaissance and Sullivan County Catskills, hosted a successful "Conservation Subdivision and Smart Growth Design" land-use training workshop on Monday, April 30th. Attendees received a great deal of interesting and helpful information to use in their planning efforts in their own communities.

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Conservancy Natural Gas Guidelines

 

Click here for a copy of the Delaware Highlands Conservancy's Natural Gas Guidelines.

 

Click here to read the Press Release issued by the Conservancy, and for links to some of the local news coverage we received.

 

 

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