Community Corner
27 Acres Of Bedford Land Protected By Westchester Land Trust
The property will remain in private ownership and is not open to the public.

BEDFORD HILLS, NY — Westchester Land Trust announced recently the permanent protection of 27 acres in Bedford, through a conservation easement donated to the trust, its 211th.
The completion of this conservation project brings the organization’s total preserved lands to 8,740 acres in Westchester and eastern Putnam Counties.
A conservation easement is a voluntary legal agreement between a landowner and a land trust that permanently restricts the development of a property in order to protect the land’s important conservation values. This property will remain in private ownership and is not open to the public.
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“When we purchased this property two years ago, we fell in love with the old stone walls, meadows and peaceful woodlands," said Betsy Morgan, who owns the property with her husband Jonathan Cary.
"Then we began to explore our options for permanently protecting the land from residential development and that is when we turned to the Westchester Land Trust,” she said. “We feel a responsibility to be environmental stewards of this land and to ensure its preservation for generations to come.”
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The newly protected land is adjacent to Caramoor Center for Music and the Arts, proximate to the A. Ketchum Preserve (owned by St. Matthews Church), and part of a significant conservation corridor that includes four other easements held by the trust totaling 39 acres of land that is protected forever. The Morgan-Cary conservation easement is located within the Town of Bedford’s designated Caramoor Greenbelt, an area that has particularly high conservation value and is an area within which the Town encourages additional land conservation, according to a spokesperson.
“This is a beautiful property that contains a mosaic of habitat types, including approximately 8 acres of old fields and meadows, an old stone pump house from previous agricultural uses, shrubby wetlands, and a grove of very old tulip trees — some measuring in at 50 inches around,” said Steven DiFalco, the trust's land projects coordinator.
“The protection of this land bolsters the ecological connectivity of the surrounding land and furthers natural resource conservation for the public benefit of the surrounding community,” he said.
Conservation of this property allows for perpetual protection of wildlife habitat and local drinking water supplies. This property is located within the Croton River watershed, a designated priority watershed of the New York State Open Space Conservation Plan. A tributary to the Stone Hill River flows within this property through multiple federally designated wetlands.
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