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The Nan & Allen King Bird Sanctuary at Hayes Farm Park

Families walk back to the Etna Library after a butterfly identification event with the Hanover Conservancy

The King Bird Sanctuary, created by the Hanover Conservancy in 2011, honors the memory of two prominent Hanover conservationists and Conservancy members, Nan and Allen King. Located on the beautiful Upper Meadow of the town’s Hayes Farm Park, the King Sanctuary includes an extensive demonstration planting of native trees and shrubs. In the future, the Town intends to permanently protect the land with a conservation easement to be held by the Hanover Conservancy.

A trail from the Etna Library leads to the Upper Meadow and allows visitors to explore the entire property and the town’s adjacent Trescott Ridge Wetlands via the Audrey McCollum Trail, built in 2017. The Conservancy and the town’s Conservation Commission have partnered to create this sanctuary to benefit Etna Village and area birds and wildlife.

Map & Guide

Hike of the Month Archive:

May: Hayes Farm Park & Audrey McCollum Trail


How to get there

Park at the Etna Library and follow the mowed path up into the meadow. Trail guides are available at the library.

  • Trails and Uses
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An easy-to-follow path winds from the Etna Library, where parking is available, up into the meadow. New trails managed by the Town Trails Committee lead through the Trescott Wetlands and to the “bird neighborhoods.”

The Hanover Conservancy and the Hanover Conservation Commission partnered to create this sanctuary to honor Nan and Allen King and to benefit Etna Village. It was dedicated on June 30, 2011, the Kings’ wedding anniversary, with over 60 people in attendance. In addition to the Conservancy’s King Memorial Fund, many volunteers and donors helped make the project possible, including those who supported the Town’s purchase of the Hayes Farm in 2010. The Conservancy thanks all who have helped with this project, especially neighbors Ken and Norma Pelton and Jay and Susan Pierson.

This land, with its handsome stone walls and crabapples, was once pasture for the Hayes Farm.

Conservation in Progress

In May 2010, the Town of Hanover voted to place a conservation easement on the King Bird Sanctuary at Hayes Farm Park, to be held by the Hanover Conservancy. We look forward to moving towards that goal in partnership with the Town. In the meantime, this beautiful property is open to the public and is overseen by a stewardship committee within the Hanover Conservation Commission. Learn more about the history of this parcel and its conservation values in Article 17 from the May 2010 Town Meeting.

Dominating the crest of the knoll is a stone bench, created from a glacial boulder by sculptor Chance Anderson of Canterbury, NH. Two smaller seats nearby, formed of a single stone cut in half, carry inset illustrations of a kingbird and a chickadee.

King Memorial Lilac Collection

In 2013, we added to the King Memorial with a special lilac collection to create a “reading garden” behind the newly expanded Etna Library. Lilacs in this collection,  identified with botanical labels, come from Highland Park in Rochester, New York, where Nan and Allen King met many years ago. Stop by the Etna Library to pick up a bookmark that describes the lilac varieties in the planting.

Bill Shepherd shows a young naturalist a (temporarily) captured butterfly.

See gorgeous photos of warblers and other birds observed among the blooming crabapples at the Sanctuary, taken by Jim Block.

The Conservancy has prepared a map and guide to the plantings to help visitors learn more about the wildlife benefits and year-round ornamental values of these native plants.Copies are available at the Etna Library.

This land, with its handsome stone walls and crabapples, was once pasture for the Hayes Farm. Preparing the Upper Meadow for planting required removal of a major infestation of invasive plants, including barberry, honeysuckle, and glossy buckthorn. Conservancy volunteers worked with the crew of E. C. Brown’s Nursery to remove the brush before the plantings were installed.

King Memorial Lilac Collection

In 2013, we added to the King Memorial with a special lilac collection to create a “reading garden” behind the newly expanded Etna Library. Lilacs in this collection,  identified with botanical labels, come from Highland Park in Rochester, New York, where Nan and Allen King met many years ago. Stop by the Etna Library to pick up a bookmark that describes the lilac varieties in the planting.

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

info@hanoverconservancy.org

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