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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 / Staying Connected

Staying Connected

April 14, 2026

One Huntington family’s journey to conserving critical habitat

A bird's-eye photo of a lush green hilly landscape, with a bright green meadow in the center and blue hills stretching into the distance.

This forest is a stop on the wildlife highway from the Appalachians to Canada. Photo by Friedman family.

Last August, Carolyn and John Friedman saw a moose in the meadow below their house for the first time. Carolyn, whose family has been coming to this land in Huntington since the 1950s, saw the moose’s visit as an affirmation of many generations of caring for—and now conserving—their 67 acres of land.

These acres sit at a critical intersection of wildlife habitat stretching from the Appalachians to Canada. It’s a fragile patchwork of small family forests, meaning that deedholders like Carolyn and John have an important role to play in maintaining healthy and connected forests in which animals can roam freely.

Conservation is a family affair for Carolyn’s relatives, who have volunteered for HLT, transformed dense second-growth thickets into forests and laurel groves, and even conserved our popular Stevens land to the east. Carolyn and John began following in their footsteps as volunteer property monitors with HLT almost 15 years ago.

A film photo of a hiker in the middle distance looking up at a rock pile in a forest.

Generations of Carolyn Friedman’s family – the Jaggers – have cared for this land. Photo by the Friedman family.

Now the Friedmans are thinking about the next generations – both of their family and of the surrounding wildlife.

First steps, like creating a forest management plan, “made us think about the forest as a whole,” said Carolyn. “We thought, maybe it’s our responsibility to leave this corridor open.”

We thought, maybe it’s our responsibility to leave this corridor open.

Carolyn Friedman

Other environmental groups helped develop Carolyn and John’s conservation plans. The NextGen program, a partnership between The Nature Conservancy (TNC) and the Forest Stewards Guild, helped to support the Friedmans and other landowners in growing the next generation of forests and foresters. Sustained outreach by Hilltown Land Trust and partners helped guide them towards the milestone of a formal conservation restriction.

Carolyn’s father spent summers transforming overgrown tangles of junipers into forests and lush mountain laurel groves, earning the land the nickname “Jim Jagger’s Juniper Jungle.”

Partnerships for Connectivity 

Through these robust partnerships, a small organization like Hilltown Land Trust is better positioned to conserve regionally important land like the Friedmans’.

This area of wildlife habitat is a region of focus for the Staying Connected Initiative (SCI), a bi-national partnership that works to maintain landscape connectivity across the Northern Appalachian – Acadian Region of the U.S. and Canada. Much of HLT’s service area falls within what is locally referred to as the Berkshire Wildlife Linkage, identified by SCI as being an essential piece of the habitat puzzle.

A map of the northeastern US and maritime Canada, showing core forest, other forest, and agriculture and development. Yellow arrows indicate major travel corridors for wildlife.

Connected forest habitat across the Northern Appalachian-Acadian Region of the US and Canada. Yellow arrows indicate major travel corridors for wildlife.

“Parts of this region, like the Green Mountains and the Adirondacks, are big areas where we can assume that wildlife move around freely,” said Laura Marx of TNC. “But those big areas rely on wildlife being able to move in and out – and under pressure from climate change, animals need to move farther, faster, than ever before.”

When traveling between habitat reserves, animals also face barriers like large cities and highways. The challenge, Marx says, is to ensure that wildlife can move between those refuges without them becoming islands.

A large bull moose with antlers standing in a sun-drenched green summer forest.

A moose on nearby conserved land in Huntington.

The Hilltowns provide a vital bridge on that wildlife highway, where animals can access plentiful forest cover and clean waterways.

“Here in western Mass, we get listed as a very fragmented part of the landscape. That’s true in terms of land ownership, but animals can really get where they need to go,” says Marx. “We don’t want to break connections through unsustainable development, but we’re starting in a great position.”

Deedholders like John and Carolyn have a vital role to play in keeping the Hilltowns open to wildlife. Marx emphasizes that there are many ways to protect the corridor without formal land conservation: simply maintaining land as forest or open wetland lets animals travel through safely.

A graphic titled "Connecting the Landscape so Wildlife and People Can Thrive" by The Nature Conservancy. The graphic shows a landscape with a mix of wild areas and human development, and calls out the following: wildlife-friendly land management, making roads safer for wildlife and people, protecting forested pathways and corridors, and steering development away from wildlife habitat.

Interventions like these can keep habitat connected, and reconnect it where humans have broken the link. © The Nature Conservancy.

What’s next for the land

For John and Carolyn, who choose mostly passive management for their forest, part of their relationship with the land is watching changes over time.

“The big change is the dying,” Carolyn said of the diseased hemlocks, ashes, and beeches in her forest. She wonders how the place will change for all the woods’ inhabitants, humans included. “It’s a real loss, the wonderful feeling of walking through a dark hemlock forest.”

A panoramic image of a field in summertime, with a birch tree in the center.

A summer view over the meadow and forest beyond. Photo by the Friedman family.

They also hope to persuade neighbors to consider conservation, which would strengthen the habitat network further. The next generations of their family continue to be interested in the land.

Carolyn and John are watching what unfolds at this place that connects across borders, species, and generations. “We’re going to let it do what it’s going to do,” said Carolyn. “We’re curious what’s going to evolve.”

Hilltown species need support from the people who share their habitats.

You can help us sustain a vibrant Hilltown community with a gift to Hilltown Land Trust. Renew your membership or make an additional gift to sustain the planet and ourselves.

Give for healthy habitats
Silhouettes of the HLT logo bear and cub.

Filed Under: Announcements, Conservation Stories, Featured, Newsletter

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Spring Hiking Series: Bullitt to Chapel Brook
Spring Hiking Series: Bullitt to Chapel Brook
Apr 28th, 2021    
10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Bullitt Reservation
  • Hike
Celebrate spring with a hike to the Chapel Brook Reservation! Join HLT staff and community members as we venture onto the trails together, in a [...]
More Info
HLT Reading Group - Vesper Flights
HLT Reading Group - Vesper Flights
Apr 29th, 2021    
6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
  • Webinar
This spring and summer, join Hilltown Land Trust staff and community members as we explore some newly released works as well as some old favorites [...]
More Info
Spring Ephemeral Wildflower Walk
Spring Ephemeral Wildflower Walk
May 5th, 2021    
12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
Fare-Thee-Well Wholeness Center
  • Hike
On Wednesday, May 5th, Hilltown Land Trust will host a Spring Ephemeral Wildflower Walk from noon - 1:30pm at Fare-Thee-Well Wholeness Center in Huntington. Led [...]
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Late Spring Bird Walk
Late Spring Bird Walk
May 22nd, 2021    
9:00 am - 11:00 am
Berkshire Trail Elementary School
  • Hike
On Saturday, May 22nd join HLT and members of the Hoffman Bird Club for a guided bird walk in Cummington. We'll visit promising observation spots [...]
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Spring Hiking Series: Keystone Arches
Spring Hiking Series: Keystone Arches
May 26th, 2021    
9:00 am - 1:00 pm
Keystone Arches Trailhead
  • Hike
Celebrate spring with a hike to the Keystone Arches - two keystone arch bridges recently designated as a National Historic Landmark! Join HLT staff and [...]
More Info
HLT Reading Group - The Common Pot
HLT Reading Group - The Common Pot
May 27th, 2021    
6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
  • Webinar
This spring and summer, join Hilltown Land Trust staff and community members as we explore some newly released works as well as some old favorites [...]
More Info
Events on Apr 28th, 2021
Spring Hiking Series: Bullitt to Chapel Brook
Spring Hiking Series: Bullitt to Chapel Brook
28 Apr 21
Ashfield
Events on Apr 29th, 2021
HLT Reading Group - Vesper Flights
HLT Reading Group - Vesper Flights
29 Apr 21
Events on May 5th, 2021
Spring Ephemeral Wildflower Walk
Spring Ephemeral Wildflower Walk
5 May 21
Huntington
Events on May 22nd, 2021
Late Spring Bird Walk
Late Spring Bird Walk
22 May 21
Cummington
Events on May 26th, 2021
Spring Hiking Series: Keystone Arches
Spring Hiking Series: Keystone Arches
26 May 21
Chester
Events on May 27th, 2021
HLT Reading Group - The Common Pot
HLT Reading Group - The Common Pot
27 May 21
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