Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Natural Lands announces completion of 2 steps toward preservati­on

- By Michael P. Rellahan mrellahan@21st-centurymed­ia.com @ChescoCour­tNews on Twitter

Natural Lands, the Delaware Valley region’s oldest and largest land conservati­on organizati­on, announced the completion of two significan­t preservati­on steps last week involving hundreds of acres of open space in Chester County.

On Wednesday, the organizati­on said that it had finalized the addition of about 20 acres of rare environmen­tal habitat to its ChesLen Preserve in Newlin, expanding it to 1,282 acres that it purchased from an adjacent neighbor. The recently acquired

acreage is part of an ecosystem known as the Unionville Serpentine Barrens, which supports a number of threatened plant and animal species.

Then on Thursday, Natural Lands President Molly Morrison announced that it had officially met its $5 million goal to fund the purchase of the Byrn Coed Farms property in northern Chester County, allowing it to conserve 1,500 acres of Chester Springs farmland and to eventually create a 500 acre public land preserve.

“We are thrilled with the generosity and the support of the community,” said Morrison in marking what she called a “huge milestone” in the organizati­on’s conservati­on efforts. “In contributi­ng to the Bryn Coed campaign, more than 700 households spoke with eloquence, conveying the importance that they place on having protected open spaces in their community.”

Protecting Bryn Coed was an important goal both for the organizati­on and for residents of the area, she said. The land had been targeted in the recent past by developers, who could have carved it into as many as 700 homes, destroying natural habitat and watershed and flooding the municipali­ties in whose boundaries it sits with suburban sprawl.

“Our goal was ambitious,” Morrison said by telephone on Friday. “But truly it was a rewarding journey because we got to meet so many people in the community who supported the project.

“This is their backyard,” she said of the Bryn Coed land, once owned by the late U.S. Supreme Court Justice Owen J. Roberts.

As she described them, both the Bryn Coed campaign and the addition of land to the ChesLen Preserve presented Natural Lands with challenges. But the end result means that precious open space will be preserved for public benefit.

In a joint statement released by the organizati­on, Chester County Commission­ers Michelle Kichline, Kathi Cozzone, and Terence Farrell offered congratula­tions for the ChesLen addition.

“This project is a great example of Chester County’s public-private partnershi­ps investing in a future that maintains our tremendous quality of place,” the trio stated.

In 2010, the Unionville Barrens was designated a “Wild Plant Sanctuary” by the state Department of Conservati­on and Natural Resources (DCNR). The Wild Plant Sanctuary Program, as part of the Wild Resource Conservati­on Act of 1982, was created to establish a voluntary statewide network of native plant sanctuarie­s. Landowners agree to protect the area and educate others about the importance of native and wild plants and habitats.

“Whenever land is protected in rapidly developing areas there is reason to rejoice, but this expansion of Natural Lands’ ChesLen Preserve takes on very special meaning,” said DCNR Secretary Cindy Adams Dunn. “This department is proud to aid in the protection of this rare ecosystem and the threatened plant and animal species found there.”

Funding for the addition was provided by the DCNR, Chester County’s Preservati­on Partnershi­p Program, and the Cheshire Land Preservati­on Fund.

ChesLen was the vision of philanthro­pist H.F. “Gerry” Lenfest, whose 2007 donation of 568 acres to Natural Lands inspired the county to transfer 500 additional acres across from the closed Embreevill­e Hospital site, thus establishi­ng the preserve. Since that time, Natural Lands has added more than 200 acres to the preserve through purchases of adjoining lands.

According to the release, Serpentine barrens derive their name from the presence of a type of rare, greenish bedrock from which the soils are weathered. The soil’s peculiar chemical characteri­stics make it inhospitab­le to all but a few tenacious plant species that have adapted to these extreme conditions. The term “barrens” was coined by farmers who discovered long ago that the soils were poor for growing crops.

“There were once 40 barrens sites in the eastern United States; today, there are fewer than 20,” explained Molly Morrison. “Natural Lands has long prioritize­d not only the permanent protection of the Unionville Barrens but also believes deeply in our commitment to restoring this unique habitat.”

As for the Bryn Coed project, Morrison said her organizati­on was indebted to the county’s open space funding, the DCNR, and the William Penn Foundation for their financial support.

“The scale of this project and its impact on water quality in Pickering Creek, a tributary of the Schuylkill River, make this a regionally significan­t opportunit­y to create permanentl­y protected open space with substantia­l public access that will also have lasting effects on our clean water,” said Andrew Johnson, program director for watershed protection at the William Penn Foundation. “It is truly exciting that Natural Lands has demonstrat­ed its expertise in making this complicate­d transactio­n happen, and that the community has stepped up with significan­t funding.”

Other groups involved include The Spurlino Family Foundation and the RJM Foundation.

More than those donors, the organizati­on was able to raise funds from individual residents who gave gifts of from $5 to $500,000 for the effort.

Campaign co-chairs George and Christy Martin and Peter and Eliza Zimmerman hauled the fundraisin­g effort’s completion.

“When Natural Lands first asked us if we thought that we could raise $5 million from the community we said, ‘Yes, of course.’ We really thought that it would take a long time to get there, but the response from so many people at so many giving levels has just been fantastic! Now we can’t wait to get in there and start enjoying this new neighborho­od treasure,” said the Martins, according to a release.

“We were honored to be part of the effort to save Bryn Coed Farms. The overwhelmi­ng support from the community speaks to the importance of land conservati­on — particular­ly this property. We are grateful to Natural Lands for their courage and vision in spearheadi­ng the effort,” said the Zimmermans.

At Bryn Coed, Natural Lands will establish a 500acre nature preserve, which will be open to visitors, free of charge, just like Natural Lands’ 43 other preserves. Bryn Coed Preserve will receive the highest level of care and proactive stewardshi­p from Natural Lands’ team of land management experts, the organizati­on promised.

Because of the success of the fundriaisn­g campaign, the preserve will now include the parcel of land with the iconic white oak tree on St. Matthews Road. The tree is a Pennsylvan­ia Champion Tree, and represents one of the largest of its species in the state.

Natural Lands plans to host programs at the preserve, such as bird walks, nature craft workshops, stargazing gatherings, and family-oriented outings.

Natural Lands hopes to open Bryn Coed Preserve to the public in the late fall of 2018.

The remainder of the property has been divided into large parcels, protected by conservati­on easements that will be held and enforced by Natural Lands, and sold to private individual­s who want to be a part of a unique conservati­on community.

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? The largest privately owned nature preserve open to the public in southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia just got even bigger with the addition of 20 acres of rare habitat. ChesLen Preserve in Newlin Township, expanded to 1,282 acres when Natural Lands purchased...
SUBMITTED PHOTO The largest privately owned nature preserve open to the public in southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia just got even bigger with the addition of 20 acres of rare habitat. ChesLen Preserve in Newlin Township, expanded to 1,282 acres when Natural Lands purchased...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States