Hanover Conservancy

Facebook logo   Instagram   YouTube          
Donate button
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Celebrating 60 Years
    • What We Do
      • Advocacy
      • Conservation
      • Education
      • Stewardship
    • 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

Hanover Garden Club presents Doug Tallamy films at the Nugget

March 28, 2025

The Hanover Garden Club will host a special video presentation of two films from Doug Tallamy of Homegrown National Park on Tuesday, April 22, at the Nugget Theater. The films will address issues like how biodiversity is declining, and what you can do to help; simple, effective ways to create habitat and support wildlife; and the personal rewards of bringing nature back home and into our public spaces (like at the Hanover Garden Club beds in front of the Nugget!).

After the videos, ‘What’s the Rush’ and ‘Restoring Insects’, stick around for a live 30 minute Q&A to get your native planting questions answered. VT Center for Ecostudies’ Conservation Scientist Dr. Desirée Narango and Director of Conservation Science Dr. Ryan Rebozo will join Alicia Houk, author and local ecological gardening expert, as the panelists. They will discuss native plants, creating insect and bird habitats at home, and strategies for yard rewilding. Plus, we’ll have free resources to help you take action right away.

Come with your questions and enthusiasm to make a difference in biodiversity, one yard at a time.

FOR MORE INFORMATION AND TO REGISTER: Visit the Hanover Garden Club’s website. 

 

Filed Under: Events, Indoor Programs Tagged With: events, Indoor event

Winter trips announced!

January 23, 2025

We hope you’ll join us for another exciting season of events out on the land and around town. Our 2025 winter trips card has been sent to member households (join or renew today!), and you can find the full listing of events on our online calendar. You won’t want to miss fun outings to Pine Park, Greensboro Ridge, Slade Brook, and more.

And as always, all our events are free and open to the public—all are welcome!

Stay tuned throughout the winter months for pop-up snowshoe events and other opportunities to come together and celebrate Hanover’s special places.

Filed Under: Events, Indoor Programs, Outdoor Trips

Promise to Protect campaign comes to a successful close

January 15, 2025

In the summer of 2023 the Hanover Conservancy launched the public phase of the most ambitious fundraising effort in our organization’s 60+ year history. Led by strong institutional support from the Jack and Dorothy Byrne Foundation—which contributed $600,000 to the effort—we sought to raise $2 million to support the essential work of land conservation, stewardship, and community engagement.

This fall, after two years of quiet and public fundraising, we are proud to report the successful close of our Promise to Protect campaign. With generous support from individuals, families, institutions, and local, state, and federal agencies, we surpassed our original goal by more than 40%, raising $2,862,309 in gifts and grants.

This incredible vote of confidence greatly enhances the long-term sustainability of our work, ensuring we will be able to continue to care for beloved conserved properties like Balch Hill, Mink Brook, and Greensboro Ridge for years to come. It also energizes our three main program initiatives, allowing us to boldly pursue new land protection projects; meet the growing stewardship demands on our properties brought on by climate change and increased use; and continue to connect our community to the inspiring landscape we share.

Thank you again to all our supporters, past and present, for helping lay the foundation for the next generation of conservation work in Hanover. We look forward to sharing exciting news in the coming year as we continue to protect land and water for our community.

And while this capital campaign has come to a close, your ongoing support remains vitally important to the day-to-day operations of the Conservancy. We invite you to become a member today, and join the nearly 500 households in Hanover and beyond who have made a gift to the Conservancy this year.

Filed Under: Conservation, Education, Featured, Stewardship

Welcome to the Board of Directors, Bruce!

September 12, 2024

We are pleased to welcome Bruce Atwood to the Hanover Conservancy’s Board of Directors! Bruce is currently a Pine Park Association Trustee and past President of Hanover Rotary. He retired from teaching mathematics at Beloit College in 2019 and moved to Hanover with his wife Patricia. He is an emeritus board member of the Rockford (Illinois) Park District Foundation and served for 12 years as a Park Commissioner (a non-partisan, non-paid, elected position) with the Rockford Park District. He was also a member of the Winnebago County Forest Preserve District Land Advisory Committee and a long-term board member of the YMCA of Rock River Valley. Bruce enjoys running, biking, hiking, kayaking, and cross-country skiing.

Bruce’s term began in January, 2025, when he replaced out-going board member Aricca Van Citters.

Filed Under: Board of Directors

Application for 2024 Balch Hill Deer Hunting is open!

August 28, 2024

Our deer permit application for the 2024 hunting season at Balch Hill is now open! Complete your application by September 1 to be entered into this year’s drawing. Participants will be notified of their application’s status on September 3.

Please email Program Coordinator Barry Matthews for more information at bmatthews@hanoverconservancy.org.

Balch Hill Deer Hunting Application

Filed Under: Balch Hill, Hunting Tagged With: Balch Hill

2023 Nominations to the Board of Directors

November 1, 2023

Jesse Casana 

Jesse Casana is an archaeologist and a professor in the Department of Anthropology at Dartmouth. He specializes in reconstructing long-term histories of human settlement, land use, and agricultural practices, and has conducted field investigations around the world. Jesse’s work employs a range of remote sensing technologies, using satellite imagery, drone-based mapping, and subsurface geophysics to discover, document and analyze archaeological remains. In recent years, he has directed numerous research projects in our local region, including excavations of historical house sites on Dartmouth’s campus, a search for remains of ancestral Abenaki settlement in Upper Valley, and remote sensing of Shaker period sites in Enfield. Jesse is a New Hampshire native, originally from Weirs Beach on Lake Winnipesaukee, and now lives in downtown Hanover with his wife, two teenage kids, and several unruly animals.

Silvia Holman

Silvia Holman, is an educator with 22 years of teaching experience spanning from Pre-K to middle school. Currently, she teaches Spanish and English as a Second Language at the Richmond Middle School. Silvia also serves as the Sustainability Chair at the Ray School PTO. Since 2015, she has called the Upper Valley home, enjoying the community alongside her husband, Peter, and their two children. Silvia is originally from Peru, where she earned her B.E. degree at UNIFE. She furthered her knowledge through a graduate program in Bilingual Special Education at George Washington University. With her dedication to education, multicultural background, and love for the environment, Silvia is excited to bring her perspective and enthusiasm to the Hanover Conservancy Board, fostering a stronger connection between our community and the natural world we cherish.

Erich Osterberg

Erich Osterberg is a climate scientist in the Earth Sciences Department at Dartmouth, studying how Earth’s glaciers and weather patterns respond to both natural climate cycles and human-caused climate change. He focuses on understanding changes in glacier melting, storminess, snowfall, and air pollution over thousands of years by analyzing ice cores collected from remote glaciers in Greenland, Antarctica, and Alaska. Erich is the current chair of the Upper Valley Climate Adaptation Workgroup, a group of business, state, municipal, non-profit, and academic leaders working to improve community resilience to climate change. They partner with community organizations to deliver timely public forums, catalyze local climate action through their Climate Change Leadership Academy (2CLA), and incorporate Dartmouth students into service-learning opportunities to support the community. He lives in Etna with his wife, Laura Greer (a pediatrician at Alice Peck Day), their two school-age boys and a houseful of pets.


Join us at our Annual Meeting on Tuesday, November 14 to meet the nominees and hear an exciting lecture on wetlands and climate change from Michael Simpson, Professor of Environmental Studies and Leadership and Sustainable Systems Program Director at Antioch University.

Filed Under: Board of Directors

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • …
  • 49
  • 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 © 2025 Hanover Conservancy | Design by Chase Brook Software