Lewis & Essex, NY 650 acres

Twin Valleys is a 650-acre property in eastern New York owned by Champlain Area Trails (CATS) and protected as forever-wild in 2025 by a conservation easement held by Northeast Wilderness Trust.

CATS purchased the property, which was previously an outdoor recreation center owned by the State University of New York (SUNY) Plattsburgh, with support from Phase III of the Wildlands Partnership. The project marks the first time CATS has participated in the Partnership, and the first Wildlands Partnership easement in eastern New York.

Twin Valleys - People on Trail

Under the easement, Twin Valleys’ rich ecology will be preserved forever. The property features exemplary Dry Calcareous Oak-Hickory-Hornbeam Forest, a natural community considered the most biologically diverse in all of the Adirondack Park. The easement offers both high- and low-elevation environments and related habitat for a variety of wildlife, including mammals like bobcat and black bear, birds like Black-Throated Green Warbler and Barred Owl, and understory plants like sweet fern and lowbush blueberry. Twin Valleys also encompasses more than two miles of streams and 12.5 acres of wetlands, refugia for sensitive aquatic species dependent on high water quality.

Barred Owl in a tree
Pointed-leaved Tick-trefoil
Stream at Twin Valleys
Trees at Twin Valleys
Whipple Mountain Trail at Twin Valleys
View of Whipple Mountain

“The forever-wild protection of Twin Valleys is a win for wildlife and people, and a testament to the longstanding relationship between CATS and Northeast Wilderness Trust,” said Peter Mandych, Land Conservation Director at the Wilderness Trust, in a press release. “This project embodies what the Wildlands Partnership is all about: collaboration between land trusts to deliver tangible results for local communities, biodiversity, and the climate.”

Though Twin Valleys is the first Wildlands Partnership collaboration between CATS and Northeast Wilderness Trust, it is merely the latest effort in a growing relationship. CATS staff help maintain trails at Northeast Wilderness Trust’s Eagle Mountain Wilderness Preserve and Split Rock Wildway. Janelle Jones, the Wilderness Trust’s New York Land Steward who has collaborated with CATS at Eagle Mountain and Split Rock, says that she is “really excited to continue to work with CATS in this new capacity.”

Photography by Janelle Jones.

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17 STATE STREET, SUITE 302
MONTPELIER, VT 05602

802.224.1000

© The Northeast Wilderness Trust 2024    TERMS OF USE    PRIVACY POLICY

Learn more about our Green Guarantee.

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