Valley Journal Advertiser

Future of farming made a little safer

A total 160 acres now held in trust for future farmers in Annapolis Valley

- BY SARA ERICSSON KINGSCOUNT­YNEWS.CA Sara.Ericsson@kingscount­ynews.ca

More farmland is now protected and will be preserved in Kings County after more than 140 acres has been donated in trust for future farming.

Patricia Bishop and Josh Oulton of TapRoot Farms in Port Williams have donated an agricultur­al easement of more than 140 acres of agricultur­al land to the Annapolis Valley Farmland Trust Society, a non-profit group dedicated to securing farm land for future agricultur­al use.

Trust chairperso­n Brian Newcombe, a ninth- generation farmer, said the easement – a plot of land kept in trust for agricultur­al usage – still remains under Oulton and Bishop’s ownership but will remain to be used for agricultur­e only, even if it’s later sold and the surroundin­g land is developed.

“Farming land is a finite resource – one it’s gone, it is gone. We have to keep what we have for the sustainabi­lity of this industry in our area,” he said.

The Kentville-based trust has been acquiring easements from Annapolis Valley Farmland Trust members stand with Patricia Bishop and Josh Oulton, owners of TapRoot Farms, who donated 140 acres of their land to be kept in trust for future farming.

landowners

since

2013.

With

each acquisitio­n taking about six

months to one year to complete, Newcombe says it’s a slow but rewarding process. This latest acquisitio­n brings the trust’s protected area to more than 160 acres.

And since protected land restricted to be used only for agricultur­e-related activities, Oulton and Bishop felt they were putting their land in trusting hands.

“We want to put our land into the trust because agricultur­al land is a precious resource that must be protected in perpetuity. ...The land needs all of us to stand up and protect it,” the couple said in a statement.

Owners who donate to the trust receive a charitable tax receipt for the value of the donated easement.

The trust’s short-term goal is to have secured 1,000 acres over the next five years, according to Newcombe. There is no limit to the trust’s long-term goal, he said.

“We’re building momentum to continue forward with getting some more land under protection,” he said.

“We’ve had good response and good support from farming groups and people willing to grow farm trusts. That’s exciting for us to have that support.”

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