Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Ideas on how to enjoy Open Space this Fall

This was emailed to editorial dept of CtPost, HuntHrld and ShltnWkly on WedOct3.

People will soon come to our region to witness the landscape's foliage color change of fall. In Shelton, some will experience those vistas while picking pumpkins and apples, enjoying haunted hayrides and corn mazes, or buying cider, wines and ice-cream on our local farms. A large part of this activity is made possible by the value our residents have endorsed being invested into open space, particularly in those lands preserved for agricultural use, but perhaps less known are the many of opportunities for the public to enjoy the variety of open space lands conserved for passive recreation in Shelton.

On SatOct6 at Indian Well State Park, the New Haven Rowing Club is hosting the 13th annual "Head of the Housatonic" regatta that has 600 entries with athletes from various Northeast schools competing all morning on the Housatonic River. The City of Shelton has purchased much of the property along the ridge lines near the park to preserve the vista of the river's corridor. You can get a birds-eye view of the staging area from Riverview Park, Shelton's first preserved park space. If you want to experience the river for yourself (downstream), you can launch a cayak from Southbank Park and enjoy a picnic at it's pavilion.

On SunOct7 at downtown Shelton, the Shelton/Derby Rotary is conducting "Shelton Day" with all their exciting activities. It puts on display the value of our downtown with the riverwalk and park areas on the river to enjoy, and which will be expanded upon with the on-going plans for downtown re-development. Check out the Shelton Land Conservation Trust's booth to see how they operate independently from the City government toward preserving lands in Shelton.

On TueOct9 at the Shelton Lakes Greenway area, the Shelton High Cross Country Team hosts their last home meet of the year against Amity and Cheshire on the RecPath and Turkey Trot Trails. How inspiring to see the school's education campus utilize the forested areas surrounding it for such passive recreation use, just as we envisioned when it was purchased. There are roughly 400 acres with 10 miles of trails in this area for anyone in the public to hike during the day.

Looking for something to do with the kids off school? Spice up a hike with a bit of adventure. On Open Space in Shelton there are hidden 23 letterboxes and 36 geocaches to find. The sheltontrails.org website also has nature guides for items to be aware of and keep kids learning about their surroundings (and despite recent news reports, there are NO mountain lions to worry about).

The City is grateful for the work of volunteers and groups to make these opportunities possible. The SHS Cross Country team helped do maintenance on the Turkey Trot Trail with the hard working Trails Committee of the Shelton Conservation Commission, the Girl Scouts Troop 363 is cleaning the Huntington Wellfield while Troop 512 cleaned up around the Far Mill River in Pine Rock Park. Last weekend and this, there are volunteers taking macroinvertabrae samples on the Far Mill River to help the DEP study its water quality.

Enjoy the fall weather and land preserved in the community, by the community, and for the community.

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