Three Rivers Land Trust preserves 405-acre farm

The rural area north of Harmony in Iredell County, large tracts of farmland are now permanently conserved.
Over the years, Three Rivers Land Trust worked with three separate landowners and their families to conserve more than 1,535 acres in this area. This effort began in 1999, with the protection of 640 acres of the Daltonia Plantation. Over a decade later in 2011, the Grose family conserved their adjacent farm which totaled more than 490 acres. Now, on July 26, the Patterson family added to that legacy by conserving an additional 405 acres.
This newly conserved farm has 1.2 miles of stream frontage along Hunting Creek, a major tributary to the South Yadkin River, where many local residents get their drinking water.
“Saving family farms and protecting local waters encompass two of our three focus areas at Three Rivers Land Trust,” states Executive Director Travis Morehead. “This easement not only permanently protects this land from being developed it also ensures that a buffered natural area will always exist between the fields and Hunting Creek, preventing erosion and naturally filtering water before it enters the stream.”
Three Rivers Land Trust works with private landowners and public agencies to conserve the most important natural, scenic, agricultural and historic places in a 15-county region of the Piedmont and Sandhills of North Carolina, including Stanly County.
“According to the American Farmland Trust, Iredell County is the 38th most threatened county in the nation for farmland loss,” Senior Land Protection Specialist Emily Callicutt said. “North Carolina is poised to lose more than 1 million acres of farmland by 2040, and working with landowners like the Patterson Family to conserve large farms like theirs is a significant step in preventing farmland loss in central North Carolina.”
This project was made possible through a generous conservation easement donation by the Patterson Family, and the support of corporate partners who support TRLT in farmland protection efforts.
The Patterson family desired to protect this land to honor the generations of their family who have farmed the property over the years.
To find out how to protect property or to support TRLT in its conservation mission, contact Callicutt at emily@trlt.org or 704-647-0302.

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