The Davidson Nature Preserve: A Gift for Generations

by Elizabeth Byrd Wood

“Blueberry muffins and juice will be ready when you return,” my aunt used to call out as my sister and I, along with our children, would make our way over the damp paths to the blueberry fields behind her house, carrying tin pails and blueberry rakes. Berry picking was a favorite activity of our summers in Maine, from the time when our children were toddlers to when they were youngsters, then teens. The morning sun would warm us as we crouched in the fields, picking the tiny wild berries. Breezes mercifully kept the bugs away, and after the first plink, plink, plink of berries landing in the pails, the only sounds we heard were the chirps of the goldfinches and chickadees flitting among the birches.

These blueberry fields and the surroundings woods and wetlands now make up the Davidson Nature Preserve, a 97-acre preserve in North Vassalboro. In 2005 my aunt, Elizabeth Davidson, who had retired and moved to Maine thirteen years earlier, donated the land to the Kennebec Land Trust. Today the property welcomes visitors of all ages and interests who come to pick berries, hike down to the fen to watch the herons, or seek out the many varieties of birds found in the woods and open fields.

My aunt’s love of the natural world, especially the birds, and her attachment to Maine prompted her gift of land to KLT. During her time in Maine (she now lives in a retirement home near Boston), Elizabeth was a keen observer of what was occurring in the preserve over the seasons. She recalls a magical expedition organized by KLT Advisory Board member  Ron Joseph to watch the aerial displays of the woodcocks, and hearing their insistent peenting calls during courtship rituals in the early spring. She remembers seeing golden-crowned kinglets in the hemlocks on the path to the fen and scarlet tanagers on the now-named Tanager Trail. My aunt is a musician, and the flute-like call of the shy evening thrush echoing through the deep woods was a particular delight to her. She is pleased that the Davidson Nature Preserve not only provides a sanctuary for birds, but also serves as a critical habitat for bees and other insects that pollinate the blueberries.

Last summer my aunt and I visited the preserve late in the afternoon. Bright coral-colored Canada lilies and Queen Anne’s lace dotted the fields, and a few blueberries still remained. My aunt noted—with approval—the dedicated work of the KLT summer interns to remove invasive plants and keep the trails cleared. We checked the visitor log, and she was delighted to see that her former neighbors continue to make use of the property along with newcomers from other states.

 

Stewardship Fund Donations needed for the ERP

Our spring newsletter featured the new Eastern River Preserve Additions and an explanation of our Stewardship Fund. We still need to raise about $7,000 to support the permanent conservation of the ERP. Donations of all sizes are welcome!

Donate here

You may also mail a check to The Kennebec Land Trust, PO Box 261 Winthrop, ME 04364.

Please indicate in the memo that you would like your donation to support the Stewardship Fund for the Eastern River Preserve.

President’s Message: 50th Earth Day Meets Global Pandemic

KLT’s President, Kim Vandermeulen, shared this message in our spring 2020 newsletter.

As the KLT community prepared earlier this year for the fiftieth anniversary of Earth Day, planning a celebration at the top of Howard Hill behind the capitol in Augusta, the SARS-CoV-2 virus was beginning its worldwide spread. By Earth Day the pandemic had caused the cancellation of all KLT community gatherings, with of course even more severe repercussions for humankind worldwide. Nonetheless, as I write the semi-annual president’s column, I will focus on both the accomplishments of the past fifty years and a few things we have learned during our COVID-19-imposed social distancing.

Fifty years ago the private land trust community was in its infancy. According to biological scientist Richard Brewer, writing in “Special Places” (the quarterly newsletter of the Trustees of Reservations, founded in 1891 in Massachusetts and the earliest still-existing land trust), there were fewer than fifty land trusts in the U.S. in the mid-twentieth century. By 1980 the number was 400; by 1990, 900; and by 2005, 1,667. Today, even after a series of mergers, the number stands at over 1,300. Conserved acres climbed to over 56,000,000 by 2015.

According to Brewer, the national land trust movement began in 1981 with the creation of the “Land Trust Exchange” for the purpose of encouraging cooperation and the exchange of information among land trusts across the country. The Exchange became the Land Trust Alliance in 1990, and the LTA continues to be the national organization supporting land trust activities. By 2015 the LTA reported that the land trust movement was supported by over 200,000 volunteers—members and volunteer stewards like you. Clearly much has happened since Earth Day 1970. Environmental improvements of equal magnitude have happened in water quality, air quality, control of hazardous substances, and many other important areas.

The COVID-19 pandemic has created incredible hardship across the planet. It reminds us that the Earth and all living things are fully interconnected. Humankind’s impact on the Earth is a paramount consideration in thinking about the future of the natural systems. Our work—the support of the land trust movement in the United States, more particularly Maine’s land trust activity, and even more concretely our own KLT—is one very important factor in the sustenance of the ecosystem. As I walked with my wife, Linda Young, last week at the Baldwin Hill Conservation Burial Ground site, I was struck by the impactful work of KLT and the realization that my small part in it was only possible because of all the past and current work of dedicated members, volunteers, and staff. In its thirty-plus years of work, KLT has attracted the expertise and respect of many community members, thus enabling us to advance important conservation endeavors.

During our social distancing, we have been reminded in stark terms of the absolute importance of a community’s access to shared, conserved areas of natural beauty. Joining together to care for and enjoy the forests of Maine soothes the soul. Please continue to support and enjoy the lands conserved by the donors, members, staff, and community of KLT. We can’t do it without you!