April 2026 eNews

Students Gain Skills in Productive Partnership

Video of tree cutting at the Ely Mountain Conservation Area in Thetford, VT.

“Not only learning but also helping our community”


The Twin States are among the nation’s most timbered, with roughly 80 percent forested. Professional logging training is critical in what can be a hazardous occupation and real-world experience is what trainers prefer and students crave. The Upper Valley Land Trust (UVLT) is meeting both needs through partnership with secondary students in the Hartford Area Career & Technology Center’s (HACTC) Natural Resources Program.


HACTC students have been mastering chainsawing through work on the land trust’s Ely Mountain Conservation Area in Thetford, VT. Their instructor, Dan Gibson, is a certified arborist and has also worked as a dry stone waller and landscaper, and he brings those focal points to the class. He says, “My biggest thing is, if I want to teach a student how to use a chainsaw I want them to be well practiced, and you need real trees for that.”



Students have grown their capabilities while helping their families.


“I wanted to do this because my grandparents are getting older, especially my grandfather,” says Morgan Darling of Barnard, VT. “We have an outside wood furnace and my uncle’s a logger, but he’s not getting any younger himself. So, for winter, it’d be better if there’s somebody out there to cut cordwood, stack it, and split it, just so I could do it if my grandfather didn’t want to.”

New offering!

Vermont Master Naturalist Program

UVLT is pleased to offer a great new way to connect with the Upper Valley’s natural world through professional training and hands-on volunteer projects. If you have demonstrated interest in natural history and dedication to environmental stewardship, this program is for you!


Upper Valley residents or workers (or New Hampshire or Vermont residents without a VMN chapter) are welcome to apply and join a close-knit team digging into our unique local natural and cultural history across the earth, life, and social sciences. You’ll gain the skills to read our landscape like never before.


The program features monthly field explorations from September 2026 through June 2027. Please click the link below for more details, cost, and application information.

Event Report:

Tree Team at Brookmead

Our new Tree Team is up and running! The first event on March 27 was held at the Brookmead Conservation AreaNaturalist and Outdoor Program Leader Holly Henderson discussed the importance of bolstering species and structural diversity within the northern hardwood forest, then guided participants along Brookmead’s forest trail to take several dozen branch cuttings of northern red oak, yellow birch, and American basswood. These trees have immense value for insects, birds, and mammals and their natural regeneration is being diminished due to an overabundance of white-tailed deer. 


The group worked together to make “willow tea,” a mixture of boiling water and one-inch willow cuttings. The dormant cuttings were dipped in this natural root growth hormone, then placed in cool storage until planting day at the next Tree Team volunteer workday in May! If you are interested in joining the team, please email Holly at holly.henderson@uvlt.org.

3rd Annual Vernal Pools Hike
Next Saturday in Norwich, VT

Egg masses like these are among the sights we'll be on the lookout for.

Amphibians have begun their precarious journey from their hibernation spots beneath leaf litter and decomposing logs to their breeding sites in ephemeral vernal pools. Our vernal pool ecology walk at the Brookmead Conservation Area on Saturday, April 11, will be joined by Craig Layne of the Norwich Conservation Commission, who will demonstrate how to examine pool inhabitants as part of an ongoing study at Brookmead, and Kevin Tolan of the Vermont Center for Ecostudies, who will introduce us to the Vernal Pool Atlas (VPAtlas) and discuss how citizen scientists (like you!) can contribute to the Vermont Vernal Pool Monitoring Project.  Space is limited, so sign up today! 

Spring Trails and Hungry Bears

We’re all itching to enjoy warmth after a winter like we haven’t seen in many years, but a few precautions are in order.

  • Hiking trails are still fragile and can be easily damaged. While UVLT doesn’t close our parking lots and trails during mud season, we do ask users to use caution and their best judgment when visiting our trails and conservation areas. Please review our Mud Season – To Hike or Not to Hike guidance to learn all about standing water on trails, soil compaction, and how to safely recreate without destroying trails.
  • We’re not the only ones out and about! Let’s not forget Mink the Bear whose den was in the Mink Brook Natural Area that is located next to our office, owned by Hanover Conservancy, and protected by a UVLT easement. We work with volunteer landowners to protect wildlife corridors to allow animals room to roam and avoid humans - Vice President for Stewardship Jason Berard is presenting on this topic at this month’s NH Land Trust Coalition Conference - but bears also search for sustenance in residential areas. Here’s useful Living with Black Bears advice from the Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department.

More Upcoming Spring Events

We have lots of exciting events coming up — be sure to check out our website to get the full list!

Bird Walk and Management Talk at Cream Street Conservation Area
Friday, April 17, 8 a.m.-10 a.m.
Join UVLT and Audubon Vermont for a bird walk and management talk in Thetford, VT. This will be a moderate, one-mile hike along an unimproved forest trail. Please bring your binoculars (if you have them) and sturdy footwear. Registration is limited to 20 participants!

Spring Ephemeral Wildflower Walk at Maanawaka Conservation Area
Saturday, May 2, 1-3 p.m.

Join Upper Valley Land Trust and the Hartford Conservation Commission as we seek out blooming woodland wildflowers along the Hazen trail in Wilder, VT. During this peak wildflower season expect to get a close look at natives such as bloodroot, wood anemone, mayflower, yellow trout lily, hepatica, and red trillium. Along the way, Naturalist and Outdoor Program Leader Holly Henderson will share interesting flower facts and identification tips.

Herricks Cove Wildlife Festival Birdwalks
Sunday, May 3, 10:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m

Herricks Cove in Rockingham, VT, is one of the premier birding sites in the Upper Valley, and UVLT is leading two bird walks at the Herricks Cover Wildlife Festival this year!


Naturalist and Outdoor Program Leader Holly Henderson will lead a Bird Walk for Kids at 10:30 am and a Bird Walk for Beginners at 12:30 pm. All experience levels are welcome to join! Along the way, Holly will discuss and demonstrate how to upload our bird observations to Ebird. 

We know you love the Upper Valley. We do too.

Become a part of the conservation solution and DONATE or VOLUNTEER today!

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