Willowell Land At Risk
Yet the future of the Willowell Land remains in jeopardy. In August 2007, our complete payment for the Chittenden Bank’s bridge loan is due. At that time, we must pay the remainder of the $250,000 that we owe in order to prevent the Willowell Land from being subdivided, developed, or even seized entirely.
Here in Vermont, the importance of conserving land and providing our children with engaging educational experiences rooted in place is acutely felt. Though Vermont’s forested land is increasing, warm valley woodland habitat areas such as the Pond Brook Valley where the Willowell Land is located are becoming progressively smaller more fragmented, due to the desirability of these areas for farming and development. Additionally, children of the digital age have become increasingly alienated from the natural world around them—resulting in risks to their health and emotional well-being.
For many of the youth that we work with at the Willowell Foundation, their time at the Willowell Land represents the only full days they have spent outside in many years. Though this is hard to believe, we have received this feedback again and again from the many teachers and students that we work with. This represents a great opportunity for the Willowell Foundation to instill in children a love of the natural world and of the resources right in their home communities.
Addison County’s youth need the Willowell land conserved so that they may grow up visiting it and learning from it. Teachers, too, need the Willowell Land for use as a laboratory to test their place-based education philosophies out in real time. The land provides a home for the Walden Project, the Walden Community Garden, and many other programs that benefit the Addison County community and the national community. Without it, these programs could not continue.