| |
Founded in 1965 in order to preserve Redding's
natural heritage of open space, the Redding Land Trust
today holds, in outright gifts or in conservation easements,
some 1,600 acres of meadows and woodlands, saved forever
from the bulldozer. Preserved properties range from
a few acres to large tracts of 100 acres or more. These,
along with major tracts purchased by the Town and the
presence of Putnam and Huntington State Parks, make
Redding a unique green oasis amid surrounding towns.
There are over 60 miles of Trails in
the Town of Redding. Maintained by the Trust and the
Town's Conservation Commission, the trails are mapped
and described in a book that is a must-have for every
family in Redding - The Book of Trails IV, published
by the Land Trust in a new edition in 2005 and available
for $10 a copy at Town Hall, the Mark Twain Library
and the Community Center.
One of the earliest land trusts in the
state of Connecticut, the Redding Land Trust has served
as a model for the land trust movement, not only promoting
methods for acquiring and safeguarding land but also
serving to educate the public about the benefits of
open fields and woods, pure water and air, and the protection
of native plants and creatures. An award-winning 20-minute
documentary that tells Redding's open space story, A
Passion for Place: Redding's Race for Open Space,
produced by the Trust in honor of its 35th anniversary,
is also available in either a video or DVD format for
$5 at the same places where the Trails Book is sold.
Dependent on membership fees and donations
from friends and supporters for its work, the Redding
Land Trust is an organization that each year appeals
to each household in Redding to join the Trust for an
annual fee of $10 per family. Members receive a free
DVD of A Passion for Place and are invited each March
to the Trust's annual meeting where noted speakers are
featured.
Redding Land Trust: Board of Trustees
|

|
Mary Anne
Guitar, President
Eugene Connolly, Vice-President
Henry Merritt, Vice-President
David Brooks, Treasurer
Jane M. Ross, Secretary
Emily d'Aulaire
Joan Ensor
Laurie Heiss
Sean McNamara |
|