To the Editor: A Big Thank You From the Sourland Conservancy

Date:

Share post:

On behalf of the staff, board, and members of the Sourland Conservancy, I would like to sincerely thank our Sourland Spectacular cyclists, volunteers, vendors, and community partners who helped make this year’s event so successful. I would also like to thank our gracious host, the Watershed Institute, for welcoming us all!

Proceeds from this event will support the Sourland Conservancy’s education, advocacy, and stewardship efforts. Over the past three years, Sourland Conservancy and partner staff and volunteers have removed invasive plants, and planted and protected over 30,000 native trees and shrubs in public parks and preserves in the region.

We’ve also worked with numerous homeowners to help provide critical habitat and connect green spaces, allowing wildlife room to roam and keep their populations healthy. Since 2019, the 90-square mile Sourland Mountain Region has lost approximately one million trees due to an invasive insect, so we have a lot more work to do.

We have just kicked off our “Talk of the Sourlands” series of free educational seminars. Please visit our website www.sourland.org and register for our monthly eNewsletter to receive information and links our events — as well as timely stewardship tips to nurture nature in your own backyard. If you have questions, please contact us at info@sourland.org.

— Laurie Cleveland, Executive Director, Sourland Conservancy


CE – US1

Related articles

Princeton Summer Theater Review — ‘The 39 Steps’

In theatrical inventiveness, ingenuity, gymnastics, energy and fun, the Princeton Summer Theater production of Patrick Barlow’s “The 39...

Final weekend for ‘Word on Front’ at Passage Theatre

“Word on Front 250,” Passage Theatre’s annual festival of music, spoken word and solo performances, has one more...

Job Seekers Can Learn To Use AI

Listings are subject to change. Readers should confirm dates, times, locations, registration requirements and availability with the sponsoring...

At the crossroads of war and independence

By R. H. Schmitt Jr. Trenton, Princeton and Mercer County have long commanded much of New Jersey’s Revolutionary War...