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Home : Stories : A Ribbon of Blue, A Ribbon of Green
A Ribbon of Blue, A Ribbon of Green
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The stories of Land and people provide real life examples of how land trusts,
landowners and others have worked cooperatively to conserve special places
in Pennsylvania for the benefit of all. |
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ne by one, the fields and farms of Ellen Lea's childhood are disappearing.
"When
we were children, my mother would point out places and say, 'this used to
be a field and that one a farm,' and we would think, 'Oh mom you're so old,'"
Ellen said. "I find myself saying the same thing to my children but now,
it's everyday instead of once a year. It's happening so much faster now."
Ellen and her brothers had spent their childhood days riding horses, frolicking in fields or chasing crawfish in the Wissahickon Creek. Their great uncle's farm was a 300-acre natural playground, not only for them but also for other children and adults who lived in the area. At that time in Montgomery County, land was still open, and people less conscious of property lines.
"We grew up with open land," Ellen said. "It's ingrained in us."
Ellen's
mother, Jane O' Neill, inherited her bachelor uncle's farm and found herself
fielding calls from developers offering big money. As she counted the new
developments consuming the land around her, she began to wonder about her
property's future.
Jane decided to ask her children how they felt about preserving the land.
The family's unanimous decision was to forgo their inheritance and make a multi-million dollar gift to the community.
The land was donated to the Wissahickon
Valley Watershed Association. It is a welcome addition to the Association's
22-mile strip of permanently protected land along the creek, aptly named
the Green Ribbon Preserve.
"It's one of those properties with memories that mean more than any amount of money that would have come from cashing out," said Jane's son, Jake Lea.
A Ribbon of Blue
On a map, the Wissahickon Creek is a ribbon of blue, ensconced by a ribbon of
green-the Green Ribbon Preserve.
The
Wissahickon Valley Watershed Association's preserve provides open space,
scenic beauty, wildlife habitat and a trail linking communities from northern
Montgomery County to Philadelphia.
The preserve also protects water quality, absorbing the pollution from storm water runoff before it reaches the stream.
"I call it the Big Sponge," said Carol DeLancey, director of special events
for the Wissahickon
Valley Watershed Association (WVWA).
The Wissahickon Creek starts as a trickle behind the Montgomeryville Mall. From there, it flows for 22 miles, past the homes and businesses of 253,700 people, before emptying into the Schuylkill River. Along the way, it meanders through 11 Montgomery County municipalities, several Philadelphia neighborhoods and Fairmount Park.
A drinking water intake on the Schuylkill River, just a short distance downstream from the confluence with the Wissahickon Creek, serves 300,000 people.
WVWA conserves land by buying and accepting donations of land and then maintaining
it. It also buys and accepts donations of conservation easements keeping
land in private ownership but with permanent restrictions on development.
*
"It has been amazing," said Phoebe Driscoll, who owns conserved land along the creek and volunteers as an Association board member. "Some parcels took us 20 years to achieve."
While creek protection in Montgomery County is recent, creek conservation in Philadelphia dates back to the 1800s.

A watershed is all the land, which drains
into a specific body of water such as a river. Sixty-four square miles of
land comprise the Wissahickon Creek Watershed. All water falling on this
land flows downhill into the Wissahickon or one of its tributaries. Because
rainwater flows across the land, whatever happens to the land will affect
the creek. Protecting the Wissahickon means protecting the land.

A city treasure
David
Bower, a Philadelphia resident and park employee, has loved the Wissahickon
Creek all of his life. The Wissahickon area of Philadelphia's 8,000-acre
Fairmount Park is an urban wildlife refuge, with 40 species of mammals and
200 species of birds.
"It's right in the heart of the city," Bower said. "It's not what you would expect to find in one of the top seven cities in the country."
The landscape changes dramatically as the creek spills into Fairmount Park. Deep alpine gorges replace rolling hills. Rocky glens and tall cliffs provide a welcome respite from city life.
The creek was once home to a thriving resort community, where people would vacation and buy lampshades and postcards painted with scenes from the creek. Along with the inns and other tourist trade businesses, paper mills and other industries competed for space on its banks.
In
the early 1860s, the Fairmount Park Commission and the city of Philadelphia
decided that industry was damaging water quality and the scenic quality
of the creek. Then as now, the creek contributed much of the city's drinking
water.
The Commission ordered dozens of industrial facilities torn down, as well as many inns and restaurants. The City acquired the land for the park to protect the drinking water supply.
The one remaining resort structure is the Valley Green Inn, a historical landmark owned by the charitable Friends of the Wissahickon (and leased to a restaurateur).
Water doesn't recognize municipal lines
In the 1800s, conserving Philadelphia County lands was sufficient to protect the creek. However, as development pushed outward from the city and into Montgomery County in the mid-1900s, the upper portions of the creek begged for attention.
The Wissahickon
Valley Watershed Association took the lead and started to protect Montgomery
County lands in earnest about a quarter century ago. It has now protected
more than a 1,000 acres, the equivalent of 760 football fields.
"There's no question that the wooded areas on both sides of the creek would have been developed and water quality damaged had we not conserved them," said David Froehlich, the Association's executive director.
Not quite finished

About
140 years after the Fairmount Park Commission began preserving land along
the creek, WVWA is looking forward to the completion of the Green Ribbon
Preserve. Through the efforts of government as well as charitable organizations
like WVWA, most of the natural land bordering the Creek is protected. Only
a dozen or so acres need to be protected to complete the Preserve.
However, this is not the end. The Green Ribbon Preserve helps protect the Wissahickon's water quality, but much more land drains into and affects the Wissahickon. WVWA will continue its creek protection efforts by acquiring land and conservation easements throughout the watershed and helping landowners to consider the impact of their actions on the land and water.
22 miles of open space
On a chilly October morning-7 a.m. on a Saturday-David Bower was lured from a cozy warm bed to take a 21-mile walk. He joined 300 people for an outing along the Wissahickon.
"The creek means a lot to me," Bower said. " And I'm one of tens of thousands of people who would say they feel the same way."
The hikers came out that crisp, sunny morning to support the conservation efforts of the WVWA.
They trekked on muddy paths, across small streams and through fields. The trail wandered through villages, ducked under gorgeous stone bridges and hugged old stonewalls. Some folks carried children, while others walked solo through the autumn-colored woods. Quite a few walked from Upper Gwynedd Township to the creek's mouth at the Schuylkill River.
Robert Allender of North Wales has attended the WVWA Walkathon every year for seven years.
"The trail is the most spectacular, open space in the area," Allender said. "It has woods and streams and it's so close to home."

* A conservation easement is an agreement between a landowner and a land trust or government agency to limit development on the land. Just as a utility easement gives a power company the right to use a portion of someone's land for power lines forever, a conservation easement gives the conserving organization the right to enforce the development restrictions of the easement forever.

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Thank you to Gerard Kipp for supporting our land conservation efforts.
© 2005 Pennsylvania Land Trust Association
webmaster@conserveland.org
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