NEW ENGLAND’S GREAT RIVER & ITS WATERSHED FORESTS

Date: Thu May 12, 2016
Time: 4:30 PM
Place: Old Lyme Town Hall, 52 Lyme Street, Old Lyme, CT
Contact Email: mleslie@ctaudubon.org
Presenter: Dr. Robert Askins, Katharine Blunt professor of biology at Connecticut College
!!! seems it only displays well the 2nd time? ugh.

BanningwoodClick here for information about the lecture.

The lecture is free but seating is limited.
Please RSVP (acceptances only) to Madeline Leslie, mleslie@ctaudubon.org or call 203 259-0416 x404.

The Lyme Land Conservation Trust has just launched a fund raising effort to purchase 82 additional acres of forestland on the headwaters of Whalebone Creek, a key tributary feeding Whalebone Cove, one of the freshwater tidal wetlands that makes up the internationally celebrated Connecticut River Estuary system.

The proposed new woodlands wildlife refuge is to be named The Hawthorne Preserve and will protect key links for wildlife corridors that permit migration and breeding between otherwise isolated communities and families of many terrestrial species. 

For a guided walk on the Lyme Land Trust’s proposed new Hawthorne Preserve, contact Humphrey Tyler at: hstyler45@yahoo.com or 518-253-4844

 

BanningwoodClick here for information about the lecture.

The lecture is free but seating is limited.
Please RSVP (acceptances only) to Madeline Leslie, mleslie@ctaudubon.org or call 203 259-0416 x404.

The Lyme Land Conservation Trust has just launched a fund raising effort to purchase 82 additional acres of forestland on the headwaters of Whalebone Creek, a key tributary feeding Whalebone Cove, one of the freshwater tidal wetlands that makes up the internationally celebrated Connecticut River Estuary system.

The proposed new woodlands wildlife refuge is to be named The Hawthorne Preserve and will protect key links for wildlife corridors that permit migration and breeding between otherwise isolated communities and families of many terrestrial species. 

For a guided walk on the Lyme Land Trust’s proposed new Hawthorne Preserve, contact Humphrey Tyler at: hstyler45@yahoo.com or 518-253-4844

 


BanningwoodClick here for information about the lecture.

The lecture is free but seating is limited.
Please RSVP (acceptances only) to Madeline Leslie, mleslie@ctaudubon.org or call 203 259-0416 x404.

The Lyme Land Conservation Trust has just launched a fund raising effort to purchase 82 additional acres of forestland on the headwaters of Whalebone Creek, a key tributary feeding Whalebone Cove, one of the freshwater tidal wetlands that makes up the internationally celebrated Connecticut River Estuary system.

The proposed new woodlands wildlife refuge is to be named The Hawthorne Preserve and will protect key links for wildlife corridors that permit migration and breeding between otherwise isolated communities and families of many terrestrial species. 

For a guided walk on the Lyme Land Trust’s proposed new Hawthorne Preserve, contact Humphrey Tyler at: hstyler45@yahoo.com or 518-253-4844

 

BanningwoodClick here for information about the lecture.

The lecture is free but seating is limited.
Please RSVP (acceptances only) to Madeline Leslie, mleslie@ctaudubon.org or call 203 259-0416 x404.

The Lyme Land Conservation Trust has just launched a fund raising effort to purchase 82 additional acres of forestland on the headwaters of Whalebone Creek, a key tributary feeding Whalebone Cove, one of the freshwater tidal wetlands that makes up the internationally celebrated Connecticut River Estuary system.

The proposed new woodlands wildlife refuge is to be named The Hawthorne Preserve and will protect key links for wildlife corridors that permit migration and breeding between otherwise isolated communities and families of many terrestrial species. 

For a guided walk on the Lyme Land Trust’s proposed new Hawthorne Preserve, contact Humphrey Tyler at: hstyler45@yahoo.com or 518-253-4844