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Priceless

There is a very special valley in our region, tucked away high on the side of a mountain with 30-mile views, that has been owned by the same family for more than a century. There is nowhere else like it in the area — it is truly incomparable — which makes it hard for an appraiser to fix its value as real estate. It is even harder to quantify its value for the owner, my friend, for whom it is simply the most meaningful place on Earth.

Saving family land from development is unlike any other real estate transaction. In most cases, just reaching consensus about the right outcome for the land and aligning the priorities of various family members takes time and sensitivity. My own family needed four years to successfully accomplish the protection of nearly 20 acres of forest land in southeastern Massachusetts through an easement transaction that involved three conservation organizations, an expanded network of public access trails and two town meeting votes. Even though my friend is the sole owner of this secluded valley, saving his land proved to be a much greater undertaking.

For one thing, the parcel is on an entirely different scale. The property is more than 800 acres with vast woodlands and rolling fields. Owning such family land is a great responsibility accepted by each successive generation, but my friend is the last of his line. The weight and obligation of doing the right thing for the valley rested solely on his shoulders, and finding the right solution became an imperative.

There are few shortcuts in land protection, especially those involving multiple partners, jurisdictions and sources of funding. Saving the valley required persistence and perseverance over many years, and I have been privileged to help my friend work toward his goal from the very beginning. Last week finally saw the culmination of that effort. Now there are two conservation easements in place protecting the land in perpetuity. 

You cannot quantify peace of mind, but long after the last document is recorded this land will endure, safe from the fate of so many other special places lost to development or broken up into smaller pieces. I hope that my friend can breathe easier now, and I am grateful that we traveled this long, strange path together for all these years to see it through.

Tim Abbott is program director of Housatonic Valley Association’s Litchfield Hills Greenprint. His blog is at www.greensleeves.typepad.com. 

 

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