Conserving large stretches of forest
Vermont can play an important role in saving the Great Northern Forest from subdivision and development. This forest serves as an important wildlife corridor that goes from the Green Mountains to Nova Scotia. It helps keep our air clean and stores an incredible amount of carbon, slowing climate change. Conserving this land matters a great deal for wildlife, climate change, health, the economy, and our communities.
What we are doing
We conserve the highest priority forestland. Over time, we’ve protected nearly 450,000 acres of Vermont’s life-giving forests.
Most recently, we conserved 6,500 acres of pristine forestland in Worcester and Elmore, 7,400 acres in Braintree, Granville, and Rochester, and 1,900 acres in Newark. With hundreds of acres of wetlands, plus streams and rivers, there is habitat for animals from songbirds to large mammals.
Help protect Vermont forests