Wildlands Updates

Resources: Advancing Racial Equity in Southeastern MA and Beyond

On January 1, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, legally freeing millions of enslaved African Americans in Confederate states. It wasn’t until June 19, 1865, however, that African Americans in Texas were truly freed. Though declared a federal holiday only in 2021, Juneteenth has been celebrated in certain Black communities for more than 150 years to celebrate the effective end of slavery in the United States. 

In honor of Juneteenth, the Wildlands Trust staff compiled a preliminary list of resources, businesses, and partners that residents of our service region and beyond can access and support to better understand and advance racial equity, especially in the natural spaces we cherish. This list is far from exhaustive and will be updated as new resources emerge and partnerships arise.  

Suggestions for our list? Tell us in the comments at the end of this article! 

Black-owned businesses 

Brockton Beer Company | 121 Main Street, Brockton, MA 

  • Support Brockton Beer Company for great food, drinks, programs, and people. Per their website: “Brockton Beer Company is proud to be the 6th Black-owned brewery in Massachusetts and is also proud to identify as Asian-owned and classified as a minority-owned business.” Brockton Beer Company has been a faithful supporter of our D.W. Field Park Initiative. Wildlands Trust was proud to sponsor their recent one-year anniversary festival. 

Affinity groups and community non-profits 

Conservationists of Color 

  • According to their website, “the launch of the Conservationists of Color affinity group was a grassroots and organic response to the lack of spaces for practitioners of color within the land conservation movement.” Explore their own resources page here

Books and articles 

Black Spaces, White Faces: Reimagining the Relationship of African Americans to the Great Outdoors by Carolyn Finney 

  • According to her website, “Carolyn Finney, PhD is a storyteller, author and a cultural geographer who is deeply interested in issues related to identity, difference, creativity, and resilience. The aim of her work is to develop greater cultural competency within environmental organizations and institutions, challenge media outlets on their representation of difference, and increase awareness of how privilege shapes who gets to speak to environmental issues and determine policy and action.” Carolyn currently serves as an artist-in-residence in the Franklin Environmental Center at Middlebury College in Vermont. She also delivered the keynote address at the 2021 Massachusetts Land Conservation Conference, whose theme was “Building a Stronger Land Movement through Diversity, Equity and Inclusion.” 

The Home Place: Memoirs of a Colored Man's Love Affair with Nature by J. Drew Lanham 

Films 

Mardi and the Whites” by Paula Champagne (11 minutes) 

  • Mardi Fuller loves spending time in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. But as a Black woman, imbedding herself in the region’s predominantly white recreator community presents unique challenges. In this short film, Mardi highlights the importance of racial education and awareness for white people, especially in natural spaces. 

Podcasts 

Always be birdin’ by Samantha DeJarnett (27 episodes) 

  • From the podcast description: “Birds are extremely awesome. But birding can be intimidating and difficult. Always Be Birdin' aims to change the narrative of birding. How we bird, where we bird and who is birding. Join me as I go out into the field with BIPOC birding experts, novice baby birders like myself and nature enthusiasts to do some chaotic, goofy birding while dropping a knowledge bomb or two to show that no matter what, you can Always Be Birdin'.” 

 Social media 

Alexis Nikole Nelson, a.k.a. Black Forager 

  • TikTok: alexisnikole | Instagram: blackforager |Facebook: BlackForager | Twitter: @blackforager 

  • If you enjoy botany, foraging, or, well, joy, check out Alexis Nikole Nelson’s work. Not a social media fan? Watch her TED Talk here

Local Black history 

Parting Ways was a Black settlement in North Plymouth, founded in 1792 by four former enslaved people who had fought in the American Revolutionary War. The 94 acres along Plympton Street were granted through an agreement with the town of Plymouth that whoever could clear the land could claim ownership of it. For an in-depth account, read this article by regional historian Benjamin Cronin

Peter J. Gomes (1942-2011) was an influential Black preacher and professor at Harvard University. After coming out as gay in 1991, the reverend spent the rest of his career combatting religious arguments in support of homophobia, racism, and other intolerance. Gomes grew up in Plymouth, where his father, born in the Cape Verde Islands, was a cranberry bog worker. He graduated from Plymouth High School in 1961 before attending Bates College in Lewiston, Maine. Read his 1992 op-ed in the New York Times here. 

Check back for updates!

Leadership Council Honored at New Stewardship Training Center

By Kyla Isakson, Membership and Digital Media Coordinator 

Leadership Council members gather around the Stewardship Training Center front gardens to listen to remarks by Board Chair Sam Chapin and President Karen Grey.

On Thursday, June 8, Wildlands Trust welcomed over 60 Leadership Council members to explore our recent 30-acre acquisition on Halfway Pond in Plymouth. The reception honored those who have contributed major gifts this year. We were so happy to host this wonderful group and show them our deep appreciation for their generous support. 

After a hearty breakfast in our new Stewardship Training Center (STC), guests were ushered out to the blooming front gardens to hear from Board Chair Sam Chapin and President Karen Grey. Sam shared some wonderful knowledge about the property and the area surrounding beautiful Halfway Pond. Karen followed to detail the immense growth that Wildlands has experienced over the last 50 years, and how much more there is to look forward to, starting with establishing the STC to improve the skills, knowledge, and capacity of the land stewardship community in Massachusetts. Following these uplifting speeches, Leadership Council members had the opportunity to intermingle, take a short tour around the property led by our stewardship staff, and explore the impressive 12,000-square-foot Center, from the woodshop and learning area in the basement all the way to the bedrooms and attic. We were proud to show off our newest undertaking, and although there is still much to do, we are excited to see how this project will take shape and help advance land conservation through skill-building for volunteers and continuing education for professionals. 

Stewardship Coordinator Zoë Smiarowski shows Leadership Council members around Wildlands’ new 30-acre parcel on Halfway Pond.

Leadership Council gifts are the foundation of Wildlands' annual giving, making it possible for us to continue to grow and meet the conservation needs of Southeastern Massachusetts. Our region benefits greatly from the generosity of this special group of donors, including through cleaner air and water, protected habitats for diverse wildlife, and abundant open space for all to enjoy.  

To show our appreciation for the Leadership Council, Wildlands hosts a celebration in the Conservation Barn at Davis-Douglas Farm each fall and offers a Preserve Tour at a different Wildlands property each June. Leadership Council members are also recognized on a plaque that hangs in the Davis-Douglas Farmhouse at our headquarters. 

Do you, too, want to provide vital support for Wildlands’ efforts to preserve the natural heritage of Southeastern Massachusetts? Join our Leadership Council today and secure your spot at our next special event this fall! 

Click through the slideshow below to see more photos from the Preserve Tour.

Corporations for Conservation: Wildlands Trust Gets South Shore Businesses Outdoors

Creative cross-sector partnerships a win-win-win for ecosystems, communities, team morale

By Thomas Patti, Communications Coordinator

REI Hingham and Wildlands Trust staff pose outside of the Stewardship Training Center in Plymouth.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Plymouth, MA — On April 19, Wildlands Trust welcomed REI Hingham staff to its new Stewardship Training Center (STC) in Plymouth for a volunteer workday. Wildlands Trust is eager to engage more corporate partners in conservation and community service as the STC embarks on its first year serving land stewardship volunteers and professionals from across the state.

The April workday marked REI’s fourth volunteer engagement with Wildlands Trust, including its third at the STC. Paul Vicino, softgoods lead at REI Hingham, began organizing the staff outings when similar company-led events were phased out.

“I was already a volunteer with [Wildlands Trust], so I thought I could get some people to help with the new trails,” Vicino said. “We also wanted to celebrate Earth Day while giving back to our community.”

Among other tasks, the REI staff completed gardening projects around the STC and helped build new walking steps between two trails.

“It’s a good team-building and community-building activity,” added Debbie Hill, operations lead at REI Hingham. “The staff that participates feels connected, and we talk while we’re doing it and get to know each other a little better. All of us who work at REI know how important it is to help be good stewards of our environment.”

REI Hingham and Wildlands Trust staff complete gardening projects at the Stewardship Training Center.

The STC, acquired by Wildlands Trust in 2022, sits within a 460-acre conservation area surrounding Halfway Pond in South Plymouth. Wildlands Trust aims to work with town, state, nonprofit, and corporate partners at the STC to advance skill development and address land stewardship needs throughout Massachusetts. To learn more about the STC, visit wildlandstrust.org/training.

“I appreciate the enthusiasm you all bring to our trails,” Vicino concluded. “Not to mention lunch. We’ll do something again with Wildlands, for sure.”

To schedule a corporate workday at the STC or a different Wildlands Trust preserve, contact Stewardship Coordinator Zoë Smiarowski at zsmiarowski@wildlandstrust.org or 774-343-5121 x109.

About Wildlands Trust: Wildlands Trust is one of the largest and oldest regional land trusts in Massachusetts. Since 1973, the Plymouth-based nonprofit has helped protect nearly 14,000 acres of natural and agricultural land across Southeastern Massachusetts, keeping local communities healthy and connected to the natural world. Visit wildlandstrust.org for more details.

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Seasonal Restrictions in Effect at Shifting Lots Preserve

By Thomas Patti, Communications Coordinator

Symbolic fencing at Shifting Lots Preserve. Photo by Jerry Monkman.

Shifting Lots Preserve in Plymouth could be considered prime real estate for people and wildlife alike. For people, the warm sand, cool waters, and quintessential South Shore views make the Wildlands Trust property and adjacent Ellisville Harbor State Park a can’t-miss summer destination. For wildlife, the preserve’s salt marsh estuary, sand dunes, and migrating barrier beach provide crucial habitat to an intricate web of aquatic and terrestrial species. Ensuring that Shifting Lots remains a place for all species to enjoy requires seasonal adjustments to how we humans engage with the property.  

In late March, volunteers and staff from Wildlands Trust and the Friends of Ellisville Marsh installed symbolic fencing around the historic nesting area of Piping Plovers within the preserve. This fencing, composed of simple wooden stakes and twine with bright-colored educational signs, may not provide much of a physical barrier between shorebirds, people, and predators, but it can help alert beachgoers to the small, sandy-colored birds that are otherwise almost impossible to spot. Alongside habitat loss from beachfront development and predation from gulls, raccoons, and other species attracted to nest sites by food waste and garbage, Piping Plovers face death and nest failure from more direct human conflict, including pedestrians and offroad vehicles trampling eggs and unleashed dogs frightening parents and chicks. Consequent population declines have contributed to their protected status under both the state and federal endangered species acts since 1985. 

Volunteers of Wildlands Trust and the Friends of Ellisville Marsh installed fencing at Shifting Lots in late March.

However, the dedicated efforts of local, state, and regional organizations and agencies have demonstrated that a little intervention can go a long way toward protecting these vulnerable shorebirds. Over the past four decades, symbolic fencing, nest monitoring, and public education have contributed to a sevenfold increase in Piping Plovers in Massachusetts, from 135 pairs in 1986 to 956 pairs in 2021. Collaboration among conservation groups—including the longstanding partnership between Wildlands Trust, the Friends of Ellisville Marsh, and Mass Audubon’s Coastal Waterbird Program—has proven particularly effective at securing the space that Piping Plovers need to thrive along our shoreline.  

For plovers to continue calling our region home, we all need to do our part! Please obey all signage at Shifting Lots Preserve, especially by keeping out of fenced areas. Every year between May 15 and September 15, the Shifting Lots parking lot is closed in order to moderate visitation during peak breeding season. Vehicles may drop off passengers at the parking lot gate and park at Ellisville Harbor State Park, a short walk from Shifting Lots. 

Piping Plovers.

Thank you for helping us uphold our duty to protect the vulnerable wildlife of Shifting Lots Preserve. If you observe vandalism or other suspicious behavior on the property, please take photos or videos and notify the Plymouth Police Department and/or Wildlands Trust at info@wildlandstrust.org or 774-343-5121. For your safety, please do not approach any active or hazardous situation. 

To learn more about shorebird conservation at Shifting Lots Preserve and beyond, check out this 2021 webinar presented by Wildlands Trust, Mass Audubon, and the Friends of Ellisville Marsh.

Wildlands to Launch New Training Center

The Stewardship Training Center will advance land conservation through skill-building for volunteers and continuing education for professionals.