Sunday, February 23, 2014

Taking Care of Forests & Open Space



The Jonah Center for Earth and Art invites the public to learn about woodland management and its role in open space conservation on Wednesday, March 12, 7 – 8:30 p.m. in the DeKoven House at the corner of DeKoven Drive and Washington Street in Middletown. Local experts Tom Worthley, UCONN Professor of Forestry from the Middlesex County Extension Center, and Jeremy Clark, a CT Certified Forester and newly elected member of Middletown’s Planning and Zoning Commission, will lead the discussion.

Middletown has been successful at protecting key parcels of open space – woodlands, farms, floodplains, and shrub lands – to preserve the community’s rural beauty and biodiversity. Now, in our role as stewards of these properties, what steps should we take to manage them for their optimum benefit to human residents and the many other plant and animal species in our ecosystem? What are the potential benefits of timber harvesting on public land, as well as the potential risks or costs of this activity?  How can additional open space acquisitions contribute to the health of these lands by linking isolated parcels for wildlife migration?

(The photo at left shows a management project at the forest edge at Middlesex Community College.)

This program is co-sponsored by The Jonah Center for Earth and Art and Middletown’s Environmental Collective Impact Network (Ecoin), which includes Middlesex Community College, Middlesex Land Trust, Middletown’s Conservation Commission, Middletown’s Urban Forestry Commission, Earth Ministry, and The Rockfall Foundation.  Those organizations all contributed to offering this program. Representatives from other Ecoin members will be present as well, to take part in a rich and informative discussion. 

The event is free, open to the public, and no reservations are required.  For more information, call the Jonah Center at 860-398-3771, or visit www.thejonahcenter.org to learn more about the Jonah Center or Ecoin.

2 comments:

  1. There are two questions that seem to be never addressed by conservation groups, 1)what are the costs of maintaining open space and other types of land.
    2) what entity is responsible for maintanence

    ReplyDelete
  2. From the reading of the post, it looks like those are two of the questions that will be addressed at the meeting.

    ReplyDelete

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