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Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Land Trust Days

By TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI.org News staff

PROVIDENCE — Many of Rhode Island’s lesser-known, yet exceptional natural places, are open for the public during this year's Land Trust Days multi-week event.

Until Sept. 29, the state’s 47 land trusts will be highlighting their properties — many with limited public access — for hiking, kayaking and other activities.

Here are a few:


  • Aug. 9 bat watching at the 1,053-acre Eppley Wildlife Refuge in South Kingstown.
  • Aug. 10 Prudence Island ice cream social at Farnum Farm.
  • Aug. 15 geocatching treasure hunt at Mill Pond Preserve in Charlestown.
  • Aug. 29 Hot Dog Roast and storytelling around the campfire in South Kingstown.

The Aug. 1 kickoff at the Southside Community Land Trust heralded the diversity of protected lands in Rhode Island.

“We don’t want these gems to stay so invisible, that’s why we created Land Trust Days,” said Rupert Friday, director of the Rhode Island Land Trust Council. Land trusts, Friday said, have preserved urban gardens and country farms across the state since the trusts were established in 1972, “so that all Rhode Islanders have some space just outside their backdoor.”

Gov. Lincoln Chafee touted his father’s founding of the state's Green Acres land protection program when he served as governor in the early 1960s. The program led to the preservation of the 464-acre Colt Farm, now Colt State Park, in Bristol in 1965.

Today, the state relies on bond referendums, grants and federal funds to preserve farmland, open space and blighted city lots.

Urban farming, said Mayor Angel Taveras, brings together residents from various cultures, speaking many languages. “They can communicate in terms of farming," he said.

Taveras also said farming creates jobs, and pledged that all residents will live within a 10-minute walk of a city farm. “Urban agriculture is now an important part of our economy, and it’s growing," he said.

A tour of Southside's City Farm showed how a three-quarters-of-an-acre farm has evolved from a string of vacant lots into a full-time agricultural center, classroom, employer of neighborhood youths and community hub since it was founded in 1986.

In all, 60 Land Trust Days events will be held in urban and rural areas across the state, including on Block Island.


This year’s Land Trust Days also features a prize drawing for those attending multiple activities. Click here for the roster of activities and calendar of events.