2021: A Year to Celebrate
This year has led to many accomplishments in conservation and the Wilderness Trust is celebrating!
Take a peek at these wilderness wins…
Land Conserved
- Frenchman Bay Community Forest, ME: first Wildlands Partnership success
- Woodbury Mountain, VT: 5,900 acres purchased to become the largest non-governmental wilderness area in Vermont history
- Marion Marsh, MA: first salt marsh protected by NEWT
- Redington Mountain Wilderness Sanctuary, ME: 3,425 acres of high-elevation forest protected as forever-wild
- Steel Addition expands Binney Hill Wilderness Preserve
- Ames Addition expands Alder Stream Wilderness Preserve
Stewardship
- All of our Ambassador Preserves have Rewilding PhotoPoints, allowing visitors to document ecosystem changes as land heals and rewilds!
- Shelby’s Walk for Wilderness raised funds for Woodbury Mountain and showed the importance of connected habitat undisturbed by human infrastructure
- New footpath and kiosk at Alder Stream
- Benny’s Trail created at Eagle Mountain
Publications and Videos
- Wild Works 1.1 and Wild Works 2 were released
- Wildlands Partnership Video shared the first successful project through this unique initiative to involve small and local land trusts in wilderness conservation
- ‘Writing the Land’ book was published, featuring poems about Northeast Wilderness Trust Ambassador Preserves
- Spring Speaker Series reached thousands of viewers through live virtual events and recorded talks
More Good News
- NEWT plans to conserve 25,000 acres of land by 2025. This year we protected 11,000 acres towards this goal.
- 30 x 30 Commitment has been endorsed by the United States of America. This is a goal for 30% of land and water to be conserved for nature’s sake by 2030
- 3,430,483 metric tonnes of carbon are stored in NEWT-protected lands
Thank You!
- Special thanks to all the volunteers who assist NEWT with annual stewardship monitoring, trail maintenance, kiosk construction, and so much more!
- We are grateful for the Forever-Wild Circle of Monthly Donors and to those who have made a generous gift to the Wilderness Trust this year. We send a big thank-you to Sweet Water Trust for leaving a lasting legacy for forever-wild conservation by establishing the Sweet Water Fund.
With the New Year comes new conservation projects, land stewardship opportunities, on-the-land learning and events, and much more.
Stay tuned for updates on social media, the NEWT blog, and our monthly Wild Times Enewsletter, which you can sign up for below to get the latest scoop on all things wild.
Photography: Frenchman Bay Community Forest & Featured Image by Jerry Monkman/Ecophotography | Group Photo at Alder Stream Kiosk by Sophi Veltrop | Berries and moss by Shelby Perry | Winter at Eagle Mountain by Brendan Wiltse | Julia Hanauer-Milne conducting a bird Survey at Lone Mountain by Jonathan Milne | Redington Mountain by Harry White