Hanover Conservancy

Facebook logo   Instagram   YouTube          
Donate button
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Employment
    • What We Do
      • Advocacy
      • Conservation
      • Education
      • Stewardship
    • Celebrating 60 Years
    • Board & Staff
    • Membership Benefits
    • Contact Us
  • Get Outdoors
    • Hanover Lands
      • Balch Hill Natural Area
      • Mink Brook Nature Preserve
      • Other Properties
    • Hanover Hikes
    • Hanover Trails Challenge
    • Upper Valley Hikes
    • Exploring Nature at Home
    • Hunting
  • Events
    • Calendar
    • Spring Wildflower Scavenger Hunt
    • Private Events
  • Get Involved
    • Donate
    • Volunteer
    • Adopt a Trail
    • Corporate Conservators
    • Planned Giving
  • Education
    • School Programs
      • KAST
      • Connecticut River Studies
      • Hanover High School Scholarship
    • Request a Field Trip or Speaker
    • Research on Our Lands
    • Hanover History
    • Resources
  • News
    • Remembering Bob Norman
    • Reports & e-News
  • Conserve Your Land

The History of Conservation in Hanover

April 9, 2021

The History of Conservation in Hanover…or, how to string a green necklace, bead by bead.
Tuesday, April 27, 7:00pm – via Zoom
Sponsored by the Hanover Conservancy and Hanover Historical Society
Speaker: Adair Mulligan, Executive Director, Hanover Conservancy

We’ll take an armchair tour of Hanover and its many now-protected spaces to celebrate Earth Week.
Beginning with a look back at the bad old days of water pollution, environmental degradation, and the
back to the land movement, we’ll go forward with the founding 60 years ago of the Hanover
Conservation Council (now Hanover Conservancy), and the blossoming of conservation efforts in this
beautiful town, from the Connecticut River to the peaks of Moose Mountain. Well-illustrated with maps
and images, we’ll reveal the backstory of how the “green necklace” came to be strung around
downtown Hanover, culminating in the protection this year of the 250-acre Mink Brook Community
Forest.

Open to all – register for zoom link at www.hanoverconservancy.org/events

Filed Under: Events, History, Partnerships Tagged With: conservation, Hanover, history

Your input is needed at the Mink Brook Community Forest!

November 2, 2020

Help the Town of Hanover plan for recreation and management at the future Mink Brook Community Forest (off Greensboro Road) by participating in this 5 minute survey. The survey is open through November 29th, 2020.

Filed Under: Mink Brook Community Forest, Partnerships

Hanover Votes to Fund Mink Brook Community Forest

July 8, 2020

At last night’s Hanover Town Meeting, residents voted to approve a $500,000 contribution towards the purchase of the Mink Brook Community Forest from reserve and conservation funds held by the Town. From the Valley News, “Plans to turn 260 acres of woods and old farmland along both sides of Greensboro Road into a town forest also were OK’d on Tuesday. Residents voted by a show of hands to spend $500,000 to help purchase land which crosses Mink Brook and includes a brick farmhouse from 1850. The Trust for Public Land, assisted by the Hanover Conservancy, hopes to spend $2.5 million acquiring the property from the Leavitt family. So far, an anonymous donor has footed $500,000 to help the project, which also received a $600,000 community forest program grant from the U.S. Forest Service. None of the town’s share will come from new taxes, and will instead be taken from existing reserve and conservation funds. Officials also hope to sell the property’s farmhouse to help finance the overall project, and a separate four acres could be used by Twin Pines Housing Trust to build “a small cluster of affordable cottage-style homes targeted to new homeowners,” according to an April news release.” 

Filed Under: Conservation, Media, Mink Brook Community Forest, Partnerships

Mink Brook Community Forest meeting now on our YouTube channel!

May 29, 2020

NEW! Watch the May 27th, 2020 recording of a Zoom informational meeting on the Mink Brook Community Forest project. The call was led by JT Horn, Senior Project Manager for the Trust for Public Land and Rob Houseman, Planning Director for the Town of Hanover.

Filed Under: Education, Events, Media, Mink Brook Community Forest, Partnerships

Hanover Trail Maps available at Town Offices

May 28, 2020

In a message sent by the Town on 5/28/2020: Back by popular demand, the 2013 Hanover Trail Map has been re-printed and is available for purchase at the Town Offices, 41 South Main Street.
The price will vary depending upon your method of payment and whether you would like the map mailed to you.

If you come to the Town Offices,  the map costs:
$7 if you pay by check; or
$8.50 if you pay using a credit card.

If you would like a map mailed to you,  the map plus postage costs:
$8 if you pay by check; or
$9.50 if you pay using a credit card.

The map is also available on the Town website (for free) https://www.hanovernh.org/conservation-commission/pages/trail-maps

Get out and enjoy our wonderful trail system!

Vicki Smith
Senior Planner
Planning and Zoning Department
PO Box 483
41 South Main Street
Hanover, NH 03755

603-640-3214

Filed Under: Education, Partnerships, Trails

Quinn Trail at Mink Brook CLOSED May 18th-21st

May 12, 2020

The Quinn Trail at Mink Brook will be closed approximately 1300 feet East of Brook Road for emergency repairs between May 18th and 21st. The trail runs along a Town sewer right-of-way, and erosion from recent flooding requires a significant amount of work. After repairs are finished, we will coordinate with the Town on ways to prevent future erosion, including planting riparian plants along the bank. Wherever possible, the Hanover Conservancy strongly believes streams and rivers should be allowed freely, and we work to include the entire floodplain of a conserved area when feasible. We are very grateful to Hanover DPW for managing the situation at Mink Brook so that the sewer line isn’t impacted!

Regular visitors to the preserve have watched the brook working to shift its course just below the log crossing, ever since Tropical Storm Irene rearranged things upstream back in 2011. What the brook doesn’t know is that the sewer line is buried here, right under the Quinn Trail, and needs to stay that way! Felling and cabling a large nearby pine in hopes of capturing sediment and diverting the flow were a great idea but apparently not up to the task. Therefore, the town DPW will perform temporary, emergency repairs next week that will involve stone at the base of the eroded bank. Next year, a fuller treatment will take place, hopefully restoring the vegetative buffer in the process to improve habitat. We’ll keep you posted.

Please give the Quinn Trail a break May 18-21, but feel free to observe the work from the safety of the Wheelock Trail on the opposite bank. You can reach this spot from Route 10 just south of the bridge, or from Buck Road. We know the town will take all precautions to be sure the project affects water quality as little as possible.

Filed Under: Mink Brook, Partnerships, Trails

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • Next Page »

71 Lyme Road
Hanover, NH 03755
(603) 643-3433

info@hanoverconservancy.org

Facebook logo   Instagram   YouTube

Get Involved

Become a Member

Volunteer

Business Sponsors

Conserve Your Land

Employment

Our Mission

Advocacy

Conservation

Education

Stewardship

Explore Hanover

Hanover Hikes

Upcoming Events

Upper Valley Hikes

Trails Challenge

Copyright © 2026 Hanover Conservancy | Design by Chase Brook Software