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Hilltown Land Trust

Dedicated to protecting the working lands, native habitats and rural beauty of the Hilltowns since 1986

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You are here: Home / Announcements / Tornado Cleanup at the Bradley Sanctuary

Tornado Cleanup at the Bradley Sanctuary

April 10, 2017

On February 25th a bad wind storm hit the hilltowns, centered around a tornado that touched down in Conway and Goshen, tearing roofs off a number of homes and damaging more with fallen trees. In other nearby towns, the storm caused power outages and more downed trees. Fortunately, no one was reported injured in the storm, but the property damage was not insignificant.

Franklin Land Trust organized a cleanup of a wetlands adjacent to the town common in Conway, where the tornado demolished a nearby barn, scattering debris across the area. Our two MassLIFT-AmeriCorps service members Tamsin and Katie spent the afternoon of March 2nd at the cleanup, helping clear slate, planks, metal, and trash from the wetlands with other volunteers.

Tamsin pointing to map showing damage, surrounded by volunteers
Tamsin tells us the game plan

That same day, Sarah LaPointe, one of our volunteer property monitors and a member of the Williamsburg Woodland Trails committee, sent Tamsin an email notifying her of significant blow down affecting the trails on HLT’s Bradley property in Williamsburg. The Bradley Sanctuary is one of our most popular fee-owned properties for public recreation. Sarah lives nearby and monitors the property for us on an annual basis. Having taken our property monitor training, she was able to make a map for us while walking the trails, indicating where 10 trees had come down and were blocking the trails.

Tamsin and Hilltown Land Trust Executive Director Sally Loomis quickly worked to organize a couple of trail cleanup days. Since the trees were large, they would first need to be chain sawed into smaller pieces that could be picked up, so we scheduled two separate trail maintenance days, one for chain sawing the downed trees and the second to remove the cut-up logs.

Volunteers at the Bradley Sanctuary in the snow
Volunteers survey the damage at our Bradley Sanctuary

As any New Englander knows, the weather sometimes makes outdoor activities a challenge to schedule, and the weather wasn’t feeling especially cooperative that week. The morning of the first work day was snowy and cold, but three volunteers showed up buck up the downed trees so they could be more easily moved by other volunteers. They spent about an hour and a half in the woods that morning and even took down a couple of dead trees that were threatening to block the trail after the next big storm.

Two days later, the temperature was in the teens, with strong, cold winds, but we still had 11 hearty volunteers come out to help us clear the trails, six of whom were new volunteers. They spent two hours in the below-freezing March afternoon, hauling logs, removing branches, and doing some chain sawing as well. A number of the volunteers are members of the Williamsburg Woodland Trails committee, who help us with monitoring and maintaining the public trails on our Bradley and Breckenridge properties in Williamsburg.

The quick thinking and hard work of our volunteers meant that our trails at the Bradley Sanctuary were open only two weeks after the storm! We are so grateful to have such a phenomenal group of people ready and willing to help out when they are needed and to be part of such a supportive community. We could not do what we do without the help of our volunteers and donors and their generosity.

Filed Under: Announcements, Conservation Stories, Our Protected Lands, Past Events

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10:00 AM - The American Chestnut-Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow: Restoration of an American Icon
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The American Chestnut-Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow: Restoration of an American Icon
17 Jun
Jun 17th, 2017    
10:00 am - 12:00 pm
MacLeish Field Station
  • Workshop
Join Paul Wetzel, Smith College environmental researcher and member of American Chestnut Foundation, for a tour of the American Chestnut seed production orchard and research [...]
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Historic Cricket Hill Walk
18 Jun
Jun 18th, 2017    
9:30 am - 11:30 am
Conway State Forest
  • Celebration
  • Family Fun
  • Hike
  • Kids
  • Partnership Event
We are co-sponsoring a historic hike with the town of Conway for their 250th Anniversary Celebration. Join Conway historians for a beautiful 2-mile woods walk [...]
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Work Party at Stevens
24 Jun
Jun 24th, 2017    
9:00 am - 12:00 pm
Stevens Property
  • Hands-On
Come help us clear the trails at our Stevens property! Please bring your: clippers, loppers, or a handsaw a chainsaw if you have one gloves [...]
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Bumble Bee Workshop & Citizen Science Opportunity
Bumble Bee Workshop & Citizen Science Opportunity
Jun 28th, 2017    
5:30 pm - 7:30 pm
Bullitt Reservation
  • Family Fun
  • Hands-On
  • Workshop
Hilltown Land Trust and Franklin Land Trust invite you to an evening workshop on bumble bees! Rob Gegear, PhD, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, will share his research [...]
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Events on Jun 17th, 2017
17 Jun
The American Chestnut-Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow: Restoration of an American Icon
17 Jun 17
West Whately
Events on Jun 18th, 2017
18 Jun
Historic Cricket Hill Walk
18 Jun 17
Conway
Events on Jun 24th, 2017
24 Jun
Work Party at Stevens
24 Jun 17
Huntington
Events on Jun 28th, 2017
Bumble Bee Workshop & Citizen Science Opportunity
Bumble Bee Workshop & Citizen Science Opportunity
28 Jun 17
Ashfield
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