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The DuBois Otter Brook Farm Easements

The DuBois Otter Brook Farm Easements in Peterborough were conserved by Phil Dubois, a longtime member of the Peterborough Conservation Commission, who died in 2014.  He left a legacy of land conservation in Peterborough with no equal.  Specifically, he permanently conserved 711 acres in the northeast of town along with a contiguous 842 acres across the town line in Greenfield, land that included undisturbed forest and wetlands that contain several exemplary natural communities of statewide significance as determined by an extensive Natural Resource Inventory.

In conserving the land, Phil placed a "Forever Wild" designation on a portion of it (limiting human impact to research and education purposes), and persuaded the Peterborough Conservation Commission and Select Board to do the same on the Town conservation land that shared the wetland complex and associated lowland forest.


Through Phil's association with the Harris Center, his beloved Otter Brook Farm has served as an outdoor forest ecology classroom for the
Harris Center's school program offerings to ConVal District middle- and high-school students. The easements are held by the Harris Center for Conservation Education and the Monadnock Conservancy.

Below: A Harris Center field trip along Otter Brook Farm trails, May 5, 2012 (left) , and remote land from the "wildlands" section of Otter Brook Farm (right, photo by Swift Corwin). Most likely the fallen trees are from the Hurricane of '38, given their direction (NW). The fact that they are elevated above the ground has slowed decay. 

harriscenterfieldtrip2012         09 Sept_6 Hurricane38SwiftCorwin
                    


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