SPAFFORD, N.Y. — The Finger Lakes Land Trust (FLLT) announced it has protected 690 acres at Jackson-Noel Farms in the town of Spafford in Onondaga County.

With nearly two miles of scenic frontage on State Route 41, this is the largest conservation project completed in the Skaneateles Lake watershed since the establishment of the state’s Bear Swamp State Forest, the FLLT said in its announcement.

The property, which is owned by Bill Jackson and Jeri Noel Jackson, is now protected by three separate conservation easements held by the FLLT. The easements allow for continued agricultural use, require the maintenance of vegetated stream buffers, and conserve more than 200 acres of woodlands on the farm.

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Located in an area of increasing development pressure, the property includes a number of fields and forests including steep hillside creeks containing 8,500 feet of streambank, the Ithaca–based FLLT said.

Several creeks on the property flow directly into Skaneateles Lake, the unfiltered drinking-water supply for 200,000 people, including the city of Syracuse.

The farm connects to a growing complex of conserved land within the Skaneateles Highlands including the FLLT’s Hinchcliff Family Preserve, one of the organization’s most well-visited nature preserves, which also connects to its High Vista Nature Preserve.

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The farm is also located in close proximity to the Staghorn Cliffs — located on the east side of Skaneateles Lake, where the FLLT has conserved nearly 2,000 feet of shoreline.

Additional conserved lands in this area include two state forests and about one dozen tracts of farmland protected with conservation easements granted to the FLLT, the New York Agricultural Land Trust, and Cortland County.

With the completion of this latest project, the FLLT has now conserved more than 2,945 acres within the Skaneateles Lake watershed.

Funds for two of three perpetual conservation easements to protect the property came from the state’s Farmland Protection Implementation Program, administered by the New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets. Additional funding for the third easement came from contributions to the FLLT’s Finger Lakes Forever capital campaign.

Conservation easements are voluntary legal agreements that permanently limit future land use in order to protect the land’s conservation value. Lands subject to conservation easements remain in private ownership, on local tax rolls, and available for traditional uses such as farming and hunting, the FLLT said.

Eric Reinhardt

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