Foundation for Sustainable Forests Protects 55 Acres In Crawford County Thanks To Generous Virginia-based Donors
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The Foundation for Sustainable Forests has protected 55 acres of working woodlands in perpetuity thanks to a fortunate series of events and the generosity of an inspiring couple in Virginia.

Thompsons’ Wood, as it will now be called, is the combination of an adjacent forest already conserved and managed by the Foundation, and this newly acquired parcel, totaling 179 acres together. 

Like all of its protected properties, the Foundation for Sustainable Forests will maintain the property in perpetuity as a sustainable working forest, thus providing jobs to support the rural economy while also maintaining ecosystem health and diverse wildlife habitat.

The conservation of Thompsons’ Wood, located on Route 408 in Troy Township, was made possible by a donation from Jim and Connie Thompson of Williamsburg, Virginia. The couple made their gift to the Foundation through the Erie Community Foundation on Erie Gives Day in August.

The Thompsons, who are Master Gardeners and have long had an interest in conservation and learning about plants, first connected with the FSF when Jim read about it in author Wendell Berry’s essay “A Forest Conversation,” one of a 2015 collection of essays titled “Our Only World.”  Jim was inspired by what he read. 

Around the same time, the Thompsons encountered a speech by former Patagonia CEO Chris Tompkins, who with her husband, Doug, had purchased and then donated millions of wilderness acres to Chile and Argentina for use as National Parks. 

According to the Thompsons, “They felt that ‘one should pay rent for living on this planet.’  We agreed.”

The Thompsons initially joined the FSF as Members in 2017, and continued to stay in touch in that capacity over the next couple of years.  Earlier this year, they began to think about how to assist the FSF in protecting a piece of land. 

“In retrospect, it all seems pretty simple.  Protecting forests that provide us with life sustaining oxygen, and filtering carbon dioxide out of the air is clearly the right thing to do; hence, our donation to The Foundation for Sustainable Forests,”  say Jim and Connie.

The Thompsons, who are regular visitors to Pennsylvania’s Cooksburg area, visited Crawford County for the first time in late spring, with the goal of connecting with the FSF and the region’s forests.

At one site they visited, Jim held a red eft, which is a young salamander that lives in forests, and was enchanted.  Naming him “Wendell II”, he and Connie became convinced that conserving this land was the right thing to do.

The FSF was fortunate that the property owner was willing to sell, and they closed on the acquisition in mid-September.

Says FSF Executive Director Annie Maloney, “Never before has the FSF experienced such a wonderfully serendipitous sequence of events. The FSF is a very grateful and honored recipient of the Thompsons’ generosity, and we look forward to stewarding this land in their honor.”

As the Thompsons reflect upon their decision to donate such a meaningful sum to the FSF, they are content but know that their work is not done.

“We remain very mindful that we, along with a few other billion people, continue to rent space on this blue and green planet.  Anything, however small, anyone can do to protect forests, is a step in the right direction.”

The newly protected Thompsons’ Wood, will be the site of the FSF’s 9th annual “Loving the Land Through Working Forests” Conference on May 16, 2020.  The conference will feature a full speaking program and woods walks, and is open to the public. 

For more information on programs, initiatives and upcoming events, visit the Foundation For Sustainable Forests website.  Click Here to support their work.

(Photo: FSF Founder & President Troy Firth with Jim and Connie Thompson; Jim Thompson holding a red eft during a site visit.)

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[Posted: October 15, 2019]


10/21/2019

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