Posts Tagged With: farmland protection

It’s our treat to be with you on this journey!

Annual Giving 2011

Members, landowners, and staff on SAHC-protected properties

In the past few weeks, we have enjoyed splendid views of the magnificent autumn colors from our outing hikes and volunteer work days in the highlands of North Carolina and Tennessee. We are sincerely grateful for the support and commitment of our volunteers, donors, and members. YOU have helped us achieve the amazing conservation projects which give all of us these stunning views, as well as clean water to drink and local food produced on permanently protected, local farms.

As you enjoy your autumn views & adventures, please help us meet our Annual Giving goal of $125,000 so we can continue to save the places you love in this region.

This yearly fundraising campaign is crucial in giving us the capacity to continue the phenomenal land protection work you expect from SAHC. PLUS, if we meet our goal by the end of the year, we will receive an additional $35,000 in matching grant money from the Merck Family Fund!

Please visit our secure online donation page https://co.clickandpledge.com/default.aspx?wid=46727 today to make your contribution.

Thank you for all you do to help us preserve the Southern Highlands!

Categories: The People Behind SAHC | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Prime Farmland Soils Producing Local Food Preserved Forever

Buncombe County, NC- The Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy (SAHC) has advanced its conservation work in the Fairview farming community by protecting 28 more acres that includes Hickory Nut Gap Meats and Flying Cloud Farm, two notable farming operations. These enterprises provide local food to 4 tailgate markets, Greenlife Grocery and Earth Fare Supermarkets, and over 100 families through Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) shares.

The land adjoins the 290-acre Hickory Nut Gap Farm conservation easement, which SAHC closed in December 2008. The new easement furthers SAHC’s vision of protecting agricultural soils and working farms to secure our region’s local food production for the future. Since 2005, SAHC has protected over 3,000 acres of working farmland through its Farmland Preservation Program.

The six heirs of Jamie and Elspeth McClure Clark equally own the 28 acres and want to make certain that their land will be used for responsible farming in the future. Because the land is now held in a conservation easement for perpetuity, it cannot be developed for any purpose other than farming.

“We want to honor the legacy of our parents and grandparents and ensure that our viable land will be farmed for many more generations. We thank SAHC and everyone who helped make the easement possible,” said Dumont Clarke, one of the landowners.

Hickory Nut Gap Meats and Flying Cloud Farm lease this property from the Clarkes and produce a huge variety of fruits, vegetables, herbs, flowers and canned goods, as well as grass-fed beef, free-range chicken, and free-range pork.

The property includes scenic working farmland, open space, a variety of forest types, wildlife habitat for mammals and birds, abundant water flowing in Ashworth Creek and its tributaries, and prime agricultural soils. Both Flying Cloud Farms and Hickory Nut Gap Meats prioritize the health of the water, air, and land in managing the farm.

SAHC secured a $281,400 grant from the North Carolina Agricultural Development and Farmland Preservation Trust Fund (NCADFPTF) and a $346,100 grant from the Federal Farm and Ranchland Protection Program (FFRP), part of the United States Department of Agriculture, to purchase this easement. The landowners also generously gave a $22,000 stewardship gift to cover the cost of maintaining the easement.

This is the first FFRP grant that SAHC has received and the first FFRP project in Buncombe County. The FFRP awards grants to purchase conservation easements on land with prime, unique and productive soil for the purpose of protecting topsoil from conversion to non-agricultural uses, so this project fits the bill.  One hundred percent of the soils on the tract are classified as prime and state important soils, meaning soils that are superb for growing crops.

“As professionals in the conservation community we recognize that prime bottomland soils are formed over millions of years and are rare in nature. In order to eat locally these are the soils we have to preserve, ” said William Hamilton, SAHC’s Farmland Preservation Director.

Often, farm and ranchlands are under heavy development pressure because they are usually flat, affordable, and well drained, making them obvious targets for parking lots and other development. According to the American Farmland Trust’s website we are losing more than an acre of agricultural land to development per minute each and every day.

Agricultural conservation easements like this one help to prevent our prime bottomland soils from being developed and preserve them so that present and future generations can have access to healthy, local food.

“SAHC is so excited and proud about being able to preserve prime bottomland soils on a working farm that provides a significant amount of food to local consumers and a successful partnership with the FFRPP and NCADFPTF to permanently set this land aside for healthy agriculture,” notes Hamilton. “Working with the employees of the US Department of Agriculture and the North Carolina Department of Agriculture to make this happen was a great experience. We are eager to duplicate this throughout our service area.”

SAHC is a non-profit, charitable organization whose mission is to protect the world’s oldest mountains for the benefit of present and future generations. The land trust works with individuals and local communities to identify, preserve and manage the region’s important lands. SAHC and its 1,500 members have protected close to 50,000 acres throughout the mountain region, including key sites adjacent to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, along the Blue Ridge Parkway, in the Highlands of Roan and in the Sandy Mush farming community. The SAHC headquarters are in Asheville. To learn more about SAHC and how to join the effort to protect the future of the southern mountains visit http://www.appalachian.org.


Categories: Farmland Preservation Program, Land Protection Updates | Tags: , , , | Leave a comment

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