Forest, Field & Shore: A Campaign for the Sakonnet Landscape

 

Chipping Sparrow on evergreen5

How You Can Help

Donate Now

With your help, we can save the natural character of the Sakonnet landscape before it’s too late.

In the News

Signature Projects &
Campaign Update
Fall 2009

Quicksand Pond Watershed Initiative 
Fall 2009 Newsletter - Coming Soon! 
Spring 2009 Newsletter

Cranberry Harvest - Fall 2008
Slideshow

Sakonnet Coalition Alliance 
Media Series
 
In our Fall 2008 Newsletter
Saving the Sakonnet Landscape 

Go Deeper

Forest, Field & Shore - Campaign Brochure

Building the Goosewing Beach Ecological Center

Preserving Ferolbink Farm

Protecting Quicksand Pond Watershed

Saving Tiverton's Forest Wilderness 

Safeguarding Tiverton's Great Swamp - including Middle Acres Farm

Sakonnet Landscape
Campaign Committee

 

Shorebirds departing south from Quicksand Pond

There are precious few places like the Sakonnet landscape, where generous sweeps of nature coexist in harmony with local agriculture and a light human presence. Between two rivers and an ocean, this landscape covers the communities of Tiverton and Little Compton, Rhode Island, and a portion of Westport, Massachusetts.

But today the Sakonnet landscape stands at a crossroads.

In one direction we face imminent—and once it starts, rapid—development that will change everything: eliminate the lush farmed fields, the wild coastal shores and the still-spacious tracts of deep forest; deplete and contaminate Sakonnet’s ponds, brooks , rivers and wells; and parcel the landscape into fragments where natural communities can no longer survive.

On the other hand...With your help, there is another direction we can go in immediately. In the summer of 2007, The Nature Conservancy launched forest, field and shore—a 3-year Campaign for the Sakonnet Landscape. Its goal is to protect 1,100+ additional acres, for all time to help preserve the special character—and natural health—of the landscape.

In addition to permanently protecting land through outright purchase and conservation easements, the Campaign’s plan also includes land and water management, stewardship, research, environmental education, and the creation of a greenways trail system that will offer access to many facets of Sakonnet’s unique landscape..

To complete the plan, The Nature Conservancy needs $4 million in gifts from individuals by June 2010. The plan as you might imagine costs more than $4 million. But your gift expands 3.5 times. Partnership is at the heart of what we do. The $4 million raised from private donors in turn leverages an additional $14 million in public, foundation, and land trust funding.

 

Nature picture credits (left to right): Photo © Geoff Dennis (Shorebirds departing from Quicksand Pond); Photo © Geoff Dennis (Chipping Sparrow)