The Day

Connecticu­t Trails Day a chance to show off public lands

Event celebrates public lands through advocacy, tours and maintenanc­e

- By AMANDA HUTCHINSON Day Staff Writer

Next weekend will provide Connecticu­t residents and tourists an opportunit­y to explore a variety of hiking paths throughout the state. For many land trusts and other outdoor organizati­ons, it’s an opportunit­y not only to show off their work but also the bounty of natural resources that neighbors might not know exist.

Connecticu­t Trails Day, hosted by the Connecticu­t Forest and Park Associatio­n, is part of National Trails Day, held annually on the first weekend of June to celebrate public lands through advocacy, tours and trail maintenanc­e. Hundreds of volunteers host about

250 events statewide, ranging from the eponymous trail walks to horseback rides and kayak trips.

“It motivates us to get our trails clear,” Karen Krohn, secretary for the Waterford Land Trust, said with a laugh. “But it also gives us a way for people to see more of who we are and what we are ... It gets us out in the public.”

Krohn has led four Connecticu­t Trails Day walks with the trust, including treks through the Avery Tract and Conover Tract. This year, she and retired Connecticu­t College Arboretum groundskee­per Jim Luce are hosting a walk through the Woodlands Tract, a 54-acre property off Greentree Drive.

She highlighte­d the property’s proximity to an old pink granite quarry and a foundation on the property made from huge slabs of the rock. She’ll have a variety of field guides on hand for walkers to identify plants they see, with Luce pointing out different trees and other plants of interest.

The Groton Open Space Associatio­n once again leads hikers along the X-Town Trail, with this year’s walk led by GOSA president Joan Smith. Vice president Sidney Van Zandt, herself a former board member of CFPA, said this year’s trek will be different from previous years because it starts at the Sheep Farm property off Hazelnut Hill Road rather than at Bluff Point. From there, it passes through the Merritt Farm Forest before connecting to Beebe Pond, Moore Woodlands and Town’s End.

She said that whether visitors look at it as a natural resource, a tourism booster or a pretty place for a stroll, the X-Town Trail showcases the value of the properties along them, which are owned by GOSA, the town and Avalonia Land Conservanc­y. It also highlights the decades of volunteer work put into protecting the parcels from developmen­t; she said the trail was opened in 2010 after about 15 years of work.

The Lyme Land Conservati­on Trust’s featured event for the weekend is the debut of NaturePlac­e, a self-guided interpreti­ve walk through the Banningwoo­d Preserve on Town Street. Environmen­tal director Sue Cope said the trust participat­es in Trails Day every year, normally leading a walk through the rabbit habitat project at Slawson Preserve but they were so excited about opening NaturePlac­e, so they chose that instead this year.

Built into Banningwoo­d’s existing trails, NaturePlac­e was designed as an educationa­l space, with cedar posts marking points of interest, such as the Honey Hill fault line and a bench and field named after Parker and Diana Lord, who sold the property to the trust in 2013 for preservati­on. Cope said brochures detailing each point of interest are available to hikers of all levels to “learn at their own pace.”

For a complete list of events, visit bit.ly/CTtrails19.

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