The 19 acres of the South Park property adds to the Aspetuck Land Trust's Green Corridor to protect land, wildlife, and water resources.
Open space preservation of Benedict family property
Where Have All The Weston Farms Gone? One Farmer Has The Answer…
Michelle Fracasso owns and operates Wells Hill Farm, the last working farm with livestock in Weston, a town famous for its farms. She said those farms, with those barns and silos you found so enticing when you first decided to move to Weston, aren't likely coming back.
"The problem in southern Fairfield County is that we've lost so much farmland because of the valuable real estate," Fracasso said.
But there's hope. Organizations like Aspetuck Land Trust, known for preserving local woodlands, are stepping up to help preserve farmlands as well.
Michelle Fracasso Honored by Land Trust
Aspetuck Land Trust Expands Preservation Area Near Honey Hill
A 11.5-acre parcel near Honey Hill Rd. was sold by Fratelli Zeta, LLC, to the Aspetuck Land Trust for $120,600. The Trust already owns significant property in the area, on both sides of the Wilton-Weston border.
The purchase is part of the Trust’s broader plan “to help preserve… one of the last significant forest block expanses in Fairfield County,” according to documents received by the Town of Wilton during the Trust’s efforts to pursue grant funding for a 10-acre purchase in 2021.
Westport resident helps grow Weston, Wilton preserve with donation
WESTPORT — Back in the 1700s colonists would travel the now wooded area known as the Bill Kutik Honey Hill Preserve along the Weston, Wilton line.
The open fields and livestock that filled the landscape there, possibly as late as the 1870s, are long gone but some signs of the agrarian past remain with stone walls peppered throughout the now 119-acre preserve overseen by the Aspetuck Land Trust.
Aspetuck Land Trust Honors Easton Man for Volunteer Work
Bob Kreitler’s decade-long volunteer effort to remove invasive species that threaten Aspetuck Land Trust properties has earned him an Aspetuck Land Trust Volunteer of the Year award.
Bob Kreitler is Aspetuck Land Trust’s Volunteer of the Year.
Kreitler formed a volunteer team of 89, known as the “accelerated invasive species control group,” that meets regularly for invasive species removal work sessions. The group has made noticeable progress on Trout Brook Valley trails previously overwhelmed by non-native species, according to the land trust.
State Grant to Help Aspetuck Land Trust Mitigate Climate Change in Bridgeport
Aspetuck Land Trust’s mission to preserve Connecticut’s green spaces is turning its focus toward Bridgeport with the help of a state grant.
The land trust is one of 12 recipients to receive the Connecticut Department of Agriculture’s Climate Smart Agriculture and Forestry Grant program grant to implement climate smart practices. Early this year, the state agencies awarded nearly $7 million in Climate Smart Agriculture & Forestry grants.
Nearly $7 Million Awarded in Climate Smart Agriculture & Forestry Grants During Climate Action Week
On Wednesday, March 29, Lt. Governor Susan Bysiewicz, Agriculture Commissioner Bryan P. Hurlburt, and DEEP Deputy Commissioner Mason Trumble concluded Climate Action Week with the announcement of grant recipients receiving nearly $7 million in funding through the Climate Smart Agriculture and Forestry Grant program to implement climate smart practices. The announcement was made at Grower Direct Farms, Inc. in Somers, a subrecipient of the Connecticut Greenhouse Growers Association award totaling $1.75 million to reduce water consumption across six greenhouse operations in Connecticut.
Easton residents approve preserving South Park site
EASTON — Another parcel of town-owned property will be set aside for conservation purposes after residents overwhelmingly voted in favor of doing so this week.
Residents voted 804 to 87 in favor of putting a conservation restriction on a 10.9-acre property on South Park Avenue. This comes after residents voted to sell a connected piece of land to the Aspetuck Land Trust in the spring.
Trout Brook Valley: History submerged but nature preserved
After three of us scrambled this week up a series of rocky ridges leading to a modest summit generously called Popp Mountain, we caught a distant glimpse of a glittering body of water.
This was the Saugatuck Reservoir, which spreads out over 880 heavily forested acres straddling the Fairfield County towns of Redding, Weston, and Easton.
Had Phil Plouffe, Andy Lynn and I climbed this hill a century ago, we would have gazed at Valley Forge, a village where the nation’s first iron plows once were manufactured. This tiny hamlet (not to be confused with the Revolutionary War encampment in Pennsylvania) had been settled by Welsh immigrants in 1760. Connecticut’s Valley Forge now lies some 100 feet underwater.
Today, the Trout Brook Valley preserve, owned and managed by the Aspetuck Land Trust, is a pristine swath of open space that features 13 miles of hiking trails. It also abuts the 162-acre Crow Hill and 117-acre Jump Hill preserves, crisscrossed by an additional 6.4 miles of footpaths.
Day in the life: Trail steward at Newman Poses Preserve
I have been walking in Aspetuck Land Trust's (ALT) Newman Poses Preserve for the past eight years. After spending almost every day there during quarantine, I decided to officially become a land steward there, taking on the responsibilities of basic trail maintenance.
Come with me on a walk through the park as I try to preserve and protect these beautiful woods.
How two ant biologists and a land trust created one of Westport's 'hidden jewels'
One of Westport’s hidden jewels – with acres of trails, teeming with native flowers, plants and wildlife – lies just off Compo Road South.
It’s not the Baron’s property. Most Westporters know that land, complete with a decaying house and overgrown paths. The town owns it, but for two decades has been unable to decide what to do with it.
The real hidden jewel is less than half a mile away, on the other side of the street. There, on Green Acre Lane, sits the Caryl and Edna Haskins Preserve.
Aspetuck Land Trust purchase to preserve 7.8 acre Monroe property
Bumper Crop of Fireflies Lights Up Westport
CT awards $7.5 million to preserve open spaces, including sites in Wilton and Redding
Aspetuck Land Trust Scores $400K Grant From CT
Easton residents vote to sell South Park property to land trust
EASTON — A town-owned piece of land on South Park Avenue will be sold to the Aspetuck Land Trust, after residents voted in support of the transaction in a referendum on Tuesday.
First Selectman David Bindelglass said it was great the sale was approved by residents, especially by such a large margin — with 1,058 residents voting in favor and 574 voting against.
Here’s a Better Way to Care for Your Yard. Your Neighbors, and the Planet, Will Thank You.
The most recent United Nations climate report reminds us, once again, of what we already know: The steady rise in global temperature spells catastrophe. We must adapt to what cannot be undone and commit to reducing greenhouse gas emissions caused by the burning of fossil fuels.
CT artist tries to break boundaries in art, nature
In Genesis, God divides dark and night, earth and sea, then gives Adam the job of naming Eden’s creatures.
In Ursula K. Le Guin’s 1985 short story “She Unnames Them,” Eve, dissatisfied with the arbitrariness of the whole set-up, frees the birds and beasts from Adam’s labeling. Nobody really minds.
“Without names, we can’t communicate,” Prosek said at the Westport Library last week. “But it can create these separations.”
Prosek — acclaimed as an artist, writer and naturalist — gave the Caryl & Edna Haskins lecture for the Aspetuck Land Trust, which serves the towns of Westport, Weston, Easton, Fairfield and Monroe. It was the first time the land trust held a public event since the COVID-19 pandemic began, and the library’s lecture space was nearly full for Prosek’s talk.
















