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On November 1, 2018, in partnership with Ferry Bluff Eagle Council, Groundswell purchased 31 acres to add to Ferry Bluff State Natural Area on the Wisconsin River south of Sauk City.

Ferry Bluff hosts one of only three winter concentrations of bald eagles in all of Wisconsin. It is a pivotal base for the eagles, a place where they can forage under ice-free conditions near the dam at Prairie du Sac when the rest of the Wisconsin River is frozen. And is the only communal roost on the lower portion of the river that has gained significant long-term protection. The addition of 31 acres of forest and field will keep development away from one of the current eagle roosts, as well as protect potential roost areas. Our joint campaign with the Ferry Bluff Eagle Council to purchase the property brought out many stories about how much people love Ferry Bluff – one of our board members even got engaged there.

Thank you to the individuals, businesses, and foundations listed below who contributed half of the funds to purchase the property.

The other half of the funds came from the State of Wisconsin Knowles-Nelson Stewardship Program. We hope to donate the property to the state as an addition to the state natural area. Thanks to everyone who made this conservation success possible.


$15,000 – $10,000

John C. Bock Foundation
Craig Culver
Ferry Bluff Eagle Council
Marie Fraser bequest
Roma Lenehan

$5,000 – $1,000
Alliant Energy Foundation
Brende Hofer & Denis Steadman
Kay Hutchison
Dave Jenkins and Mary Pertzborn
Bill & Donna Knickmeyer
The Wisconsin Land Fund of the Greater Green Bay Community Foundation

Up to $999
Anonymous
Norman and Lucie Arendt
Kenneth & Tiffany Baumgardt
Matt Blessing and Susan Maloney
Leroy and Glennda Brandt
Kristin Clausen
CMS Business Services, Inc.
Debbie and Gregory Cooke
Lawrence Czosnek
Richard & Beverly Davidson
Gary & Lisa Davis
Ronald Depouw Jr.
Jan Dorner
Bill and Amy Dunlop
Edge Consulting, Inc.
Carroll & Marjorie Erlandson
Carol Fleishauer
Sara and Jonathan Giacalone
Mark Gnabasik
Government Policy Solutions
Michael Hedemark & Arlyne Johnson
Pam and Craig Heilman
James Hogan Jr.
Linda and Jeff Huttenburg
Barbara Irvin
Steven Koehler & Sandra Fuchs
Dr. Diana Kruse
Darlene & Amanda Lambert
Fred Lemm
Ken and Debby Levin
Joel and Pamela Lundgren
Joe Lusson and Aleen Tierney
Nancy McGill
Ronald & Sandy Opitz
Jim and Carole Peterson
Katherine Pientka
Chad and Lisa Pierick
Piggly Wiggly / Opal Foods #206
Richard and Mary Ann Reale
Peter Schlicht
Edwin Barclay Shultz
Schwartz Insurance
Shirley Shannon
Jeanne Staskowski
Richard Steeves
Tom Sullivan
Anita Temple
Gene & Sandy Unger
Village Family Dental Associates, S.C.
Gary and Nancy Walden
Weaver Sales of Sauk City
Robyn Weis
Fred and Karen Wollenburg
Levi & Janet Wood
Douglas & Donna Woodman
Lynda and Dick Wright
Beth Zelten
Larry and Patricia Ziemer

Dineo Dowd loves Patrick Marsh: “It’s like a dream come true to live right next to such a beautiful land. The trails are well maintained and it’s a peaceful land to walk all year around.” Dineo should know; she and her family are Sun Prairie residents and avid explorers of great local places. And she is the Madison representative for Hike It Baby, an organization dedicated to getting families together and out into nature with birth to school-age kids.

We hope it will be welcome news to Dineo and you that on October 31, 2018 we purchased 25 acres on the northwest side of Patrick Marsh on the eastern doorstep of Sun Prairie.

This property was identified as a high priority for acquisition going back to Dane County’s 2003 Patrick Marsh Plan. The land occupies a low hill rising above the wildlife viewing platform and main trail into the wildlife area.  Restoration of the property will expand outdoor learning opportunities for students, nesting habitat for waterfowl and grassland birds, and add to the abundance of prairie flowers needed for pollinators like monarch butterflies. It is also a great place to add a scenic overlook and trail tying into the existing trails at the marsh.

Sun Prairie major Paul Esser has been a strong advocate for adding this land to Patrick Marsh. “I am so pleased that the purchase has been finalized. This addition to Patrick Marsh will benefit the people of northeast Dane County for years to come while providing much needed habitat for many members of the wildlife community.”

The City of Sun Prairie will be the long-term owner of the property. Groundswell, Patrick Marsh Conservancy, and our volunteers will partner with the city to plant the land to prairie and add the hiking trail. If you’d like to join our monthly outdoor volunteering activities at Patrick Marsh, please sign-up for our volunteer emails.

We am thankful to the landowner, Tom Hanley, for selling the property to us at discount.

Strong support from the community made this purchase possible. Many thanks to these funders for their financial support: Dane County Conservation Fund, City of Sun Prairie, State of Wisconsin Knowles-Nelson Stewardship Program, Town of Bristol, Patrick Marsh Conservancy, Token Creek Watershed Association, Bart and Shirley Klotzbach, Florence Schmitt, Samuel and Lynne Dennis, Jr., and supporters of Groundswell. We are especially grateful for the partnership with Patrick Marsh Conservancy over the years.

This acquisition is a big win for Patrick Marsh. Thanks for your part in making it happen.

 

Protecting special places forever takes commitment. Thanks to one landowner’s persistence and patience, today 139 acres of scenic upland and wetland habitat were protected forever at French Creek Wildlife Area in Columbia County on September 28, 2018.

For generations, Richard Wilcox’s family has owned and operated their farm adjacent to what we now call French Creek Wildlife Area. In fact, some of the Town of Fort Winnebago’s oldest plat books show the Wilcox family farm, and even the road the farm sits on bears the Wilcox name. Richard decided to sell the farmland to Groundswell to ensure the land his family has enjoyed for generations can be enjoyed by others.

Groundswell will manage the property consistent with the adjacent state land to increase public recreation opportunities at French Creek Wildlife Area.

“Restoring the farmland to native cover will increase bird nesting potential, add habitat complexity to a key stopover area during migration, and decrease nutrient runoff within the watershed.” – Sara Kehrli, DNR Wildlife Biologist.

Funding to purchase the Wilcox Addition to French Creek Wildlife Area was provided by Knowles-Nelson Stewardship Program, Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, National Wild Turkey Federation, and supporters of Groundswell.

When it comes to protecting special places, the landowner is the key. We are happy to share with you that one very community-minded landowner just made some great things happen on the west side of Cherokee Marsh.

On July 6, 2018,  Peg Whiteside donated to us a perpetual conservation easement over her 90-acre farm, ensuring that the land will remain available for farming even after she no longer owns it. Then she sold to us, at a discount, ten acres of land to allow a group of Hmong farmers to continue to have a place to raise vegetables and flowers. Peg told us that she is “grateful there is a way to protect her farm and also the land that the Hmong farmers have been relying on for the past 20 years.”

Peg’s farm sits on a hill overlooking Cherokee Marsh. It is made up of some of the best soil in the nation. It is also an important link in the landscape between Cherokee Marsh and our Westport Drumlin preserve. According to Tom Wilson, Town of Westport Administrator, “The conservation easement in the Village of Waunakee near the corner of River Road and Bong Road helps the Village and Westport meet our joint goal of maintaining open space between Waunakee and DeForest.” Even more, the conservation easement allows us to create a hiking trail that will link the marsh and the drumlin.

Several Hmong farmers have been long-term tenants on Peg’s farm. Knowing that minority and immigrant farmers sometimes face barriers to long-term land access, Peg turned to us to find a way for the farmers to continue to work the land after she retires from farming. Could we help? Thanks to Peg’s generosity, an anonymous donor, and a grant from the Dane County Conservation Fund (under its innovative Agriculture, Gardening, and Foraging initiative), we are able to do so by purchasing ten acres from Peg. Now we hope to work with the farmers to add a well and sheds to the property.

Your support makes it possible for Groundswell to pursue opportunities like these, where we use our land protection skills to help meet community needs. If you have ideas of other places we can put our land protection tools to use, please let us know. And the next time you meet a conservation-minded farmer or landowner, please thank them!

On June 26, 2018, we protected 95 acres of wetland along the Yahara River on the north side of Cherokee Marsh. This important acquisition connects a 160-acre block of county and state land near Hwy. 19 and the Yahara River with the bulk of the public conservation lands at the marsh.

Our thanks go to the Wisconsin Laborers’ Apprenticeship and Training Fund for selling the land to us.  According to Craig Ziegler, Director of the Training Center, “We felt it was important to have the wetland that we owned be left in its natural state. What better way to have that done than to put it into conservation.”

This purchase is the latest in a six decade-long effort to protect the 3,600-acre wetland complex that is Cherokee Marsh. (Thanks to the Friends of Cherokee Marsh for figuring out that the Cherokee Marsh wetlands  – extending from the northeast tip of Lake Mendota to just north of DeForest, and including Token Creek — cover that many acres).

In the late 1950s, the Dane County Conservation League, the City of Madison, and the State Conservation Department (now the DNR) developed a plan for state ownership of about 3,000 acres of the marsh, at an estimated cost of $250,000 spread over 20 to 30 years. At that time only 120 acres had been acquired. In 1981 a plan was adopted by DNR, Dane County, the City of Madison, and Towns of Burke, Westport, and Windsor to protect 3,000 acres of the core wetland and up to 3,000 additional acres of adjacent upland. Every year we get closer to that goal, but the price tag has increased, to say the least.

Conservation of great places like Cherokee Marsh doesn’t happen by accident. Since the first acquisition, the DNR, Dane County, City of Madison, Groundswell, Friends of Cherokee Marsh, the Towns of Westport and Burke, the Village of Windsor, and Madison Metropolitan Sewage District have worked to assemble an incredible public conservation landscape on the northern doorstep of Madison. It is an accomplishment we can all be very proud of.

Funding to purchase the Wisconsin Laborer’s property was provided by Knowles-Nelson Stewardship Program, North American Wetlands Conservation Act, Dane County Conservation Fund, Friends of Cherokee Marsh, and supporters of Groundswell.

Thanks to everyone who made this success possible. Perseverance pays off.

Good news that today, May 25, 2018, we permanently protected 43 acres of land rising above Lake Wisconsin in the Town of Lodi, Columbia County. Thanks to the generosity and foresights of the landowners, Tim and Terri Escher, our perpetual conservation easement now permanently prevents development of this property.

This latest conservation easement is located between two other conservation easements. Together, all three easements that we hold form a corridor of conserved land that extends across 182 acres of upland woods, prairie remnants, wetlands, and 3,000 feet of mostly undeveloped shoreline on Lake Wisconsin. These lands are not open to the public but they protect beautiful scenery that will be enjoyed forever by boaters on the lake. The easements also help maintain water quality by restricting the disturbance of soil and sediment that might otherwise end up in the lake.

Conservation easements are flexible land protection tools that help landowners and communities meet conservation goals. They provide permanent protection from selected land uses but keep the land in private ownership and on the tax rolls. It is an honor for us to work with these landowners who have saved important land for the benefit of future generations.

On April 4, 2018 Groundswell helped assure the continued protection of nearly 3,000 feet of shoreline on Lake Wisconsin near Okee in Columbia County. In collaboration with Gathering Waters, Wisconsin’s Alliance for Land Trusts, we assumed responsibility for the stewardship of a 92-acre permanent conservation easement that protects a large area of wetlands and forest and includes a single house.

The conservation easement was originally established between the landowners and Gathering Waters in 1999. According to Mike Carlson, Executive Director of Gathering Waters, “Gathering Waters took on the easement to help protect this valuable land at a  time when there wasn’t a land trust active in the area. I am glad that we can hand off permanent protection of this property to Groundswell.”

Groundswell will inspect the property every year and work with the current and future landowners to ensure that Lake Wisconsin scenery and wildlife habitat remains undisturbed.

Good news that on Tuesday, February 13, 2018, through the generosity of Orfordville residents, Norman and Carol Aulabaugh, 75 acres of rolling landscape will be transformed into a public natural resource.

Norm and Carol donated the land, to be named Sunny Peace Prairie, to Green-Rock Audubon Society, who will be responsible for managing the restoration efforts. Groundswell Conservancy was granted a permanent conservation easement on the land to ensure that the Aulabaugh’s wishes for it to remain open for the public’s enjoyment be upheld, forever.

The Aulabaugh’s vision for Sunny Peace Prairie is for it to be a nature education resource and place for quiet contemplation. Transforming the land back into a prairie and oak woodland with walking paths will begin this year thanks to a generous endowment that Norm and Carol have established at the Community Foundation of Southern Wisconsin.

When asked to say something about what motivated them to donate their land, Norm offered these words from the book O Pioneers! by Willa Cather:

“The land belongs to the future, Carl; that’s the way it seems to me. How many of the names on the county clerk’s plat will be there in fifty years? I might as well try to will the sunset over there to my brother’s children. We come and go, but the land is always here. And the people who love it and understand it are the people who own it–for a little while.”

Our thanks go to Norm and Carol for their wonderful gift to the future and to Groundswell Conservancy supporters that make our work on these projects possible.

2020 Updates: Click here to see a short video documentary about the prairie planting at Sunny Peace Prairie. And here’s a late summer video update on the prairie.

Thanks to the generous donation of land made by Full Circle Farm, LLC, on December 29, 2017 we permanently protected 31 acres of wetland north of Stoughton.  This property is adjacent to an 82-acre wetland area owned by the DNR with 2,500 feet of shoreline on the east side of the Yahara River.

Wetlands are increasingly endangered in Wisconsin. According to Katie Beilfuss, Outreach Programs Director at Wisconsin Wetlands Association, “wetlands provide critical natural benefits for our communities, including protection from flooding, improving water quality, and providing critical habitat for wildlife. With 50% of Wisconsin’s wetlands already gone, and efforts underway to roll back state and federal wetland protections, it’s more important than ever to protect wetlands through local and private actions like this one.”

Our thanks to Full Circle Farm, LLC for their generosity and to the continued backing of Groundswell Conservancy supporters – together we make these land conservation successes possible.

You did it, you saved the woods!

Buying a half-acre of land next to Lake View Elementary would not have been possible for the school without the help from Groundswell supporters, who contributed $130,500 to purchase the land and to help build what we’re calling a nature course. On Monday, August 28, 2017, the Madison School District Board of Education voted to provide the remaining $25,000 in funds needed to purchase the land.

We plan to partner with Operation Fresh Start – a program that helps disconnected youth get their high school diploma and gain the skills to be successful in life – to build a nature course where the students can have fun while learning about nature.

Nearly 80% of Lake View’s students come from low-income families living in small apartments with no yard to play in and explore. Your gift gets them outside and excited about seeds sprouting, leaves falling, and the warbling songs of birds. Research shows that daily physical activity in nature gives them a better chance of succeeding academically. And they’ll take those wonderful outdoor experiences with them into adulthood.

On December 22, 2017 we purchased the land and will host a celebration at Lake View Elementary to honor everyone who made this project possible.

If you haven’t already seen first-hand how this land and the outdoor classroom is impacting the lives of Lake View students, let us arrange to have the students take you on a personal tour. You can also read more about this project in this Isthmus story.