Family
protects key sites
along Upper Iowa River
This
article was written and posted on INHF's website in May 2002.
As canoe season gets
underway, canoeists on the Upper Iowa River can now float by some
beautiful scenery and know it will stay beautiful.
Brothers David and
Bill Heine donated a conservation easement on 105 acres of their
Chimney Rock Ranch, which contains soaring chimney rocks and palisades
along one of the most scenic river bends between Kendallville
and Bluffton. Further downstream, David and wife Kirsten Heine,
are placing an Emergency Wetland Protection (EWP) easement on
another lovely river bend.
A conservation easement
allows interested landowners to maintain private ownership but
donate or sell selected rights. For example, the Heines have permanently
surrendered their development, mining and some agricultural rights
to protect the areas scenery, wildlife habitat and water
quality. If Heines sell the property later, the easement restrictions
are part of the deed and transfer to future owners.
The whole Upper
Iowa River is a phenomenal natural resource, and the Heine properties
are part of what make it phenomenal, said Joe McGovern,
Director of Land Stewardship with the Iowa Natural Heritage Foundation
(INHF). When canoeists take their favorite photos of this
rivers scenery, theyre often photographing the Heine
property. This family has made a huge gift to their neighborhood,
to Iowa and to the land. Though the Heines continue to own the
land and maintain private access, every local resident or tourist
will benefit from the scenery, wildlife and water quality they
have protected.
INHF is a nonprofit,
conservation group that works with private landowners and other
partners to protect Iowas land, water and wildlife. INHF
will hold and monitor the Chimney Rock Ranch easement.
David and Bill are
natives of Cedar Falls and remember many long weekends spent hunting
and fishing along the Upper Iowa River. Kirsten and I moved
to Decorah because we have a passion for the Upper Iowa,
said David. We love the river and we wanted to live near
it and enjoy it. At the time we had no idea that it needed protection.
But shortly after living here, we saw land being bought up and
beautiful bluffs being desecrated.
David and Kirsten
have remodeled and live in the house that was built on the property
in 1853. Weve restored all the original farm buildings,
including a 1901 barn. We raise soybeans and some livestock, so
we are not anti-agriculture, notes David. We created
these conservation easements because were anti-sprawl.
This place
is a gift, so we need to preserve and take care of it, said
Kirsten, who grew up in Decorah. Our goal is water quality,
soil conservation and protecting this beautiful landscape.
David is a doctor at the Decorah Clinic-Mayo Health System and
Kirsten works for the Vesterheim Norwegian-American Museum in
Decorah.
Bill Heine lives
in Denver, Iowa, and is president and CEO of Fosters, Inc., in
Cedar Falls. The Upper Iowa River corridor is definitely
one of those special places that Iowa has to offer that needs
to be safeguarded against the sprawl of modern life so that we
can all get an occasional glimpse of Iowa as our forefathers saw
it, said Bill. We were very happy that the Iowa Natural
Heritage Foundation was able to help us protect a part of this
beautiful river.
The Heines are not
the first family to place private conservation easements along
the Upper Iowa River. They expanded an earlier easement placed
on their land by INHF and then then-owner in 1987. Last year a
dozen landowners in the River Bend region east of Decorah area
donated private conservation easements to INHF and the Iowa DNR.
INHF is talking with many other landowners about permanent land
protection elsewhere along the river. The Heine easement and other
land protection projects are featured at a new section on INHFs
website: www.inhf.org/upperiowariver.htm.
The value of a conservation
easement is determined by an appraised value of the relinquished
property rights-such as development or mining. Some federal programs,
like the EWP program administered by the NRCS (part of the U.S.
Department of Agriculture), pay for these rights. Even so, David
and Kirsten opted to receive only 60% of their EWP payment. David
and Bill donated the entire value of the Chimney Rock Ranch easement-a
substantial gift to the people of Iowa, says McGovern. Such
donations can provide income tax benefits to the donor.
Now that the
Heines and other landowners along the Upper Iowa River have implemented
conservation protection, were getting a lot more questions
from neighbors about how they can protect their lands natural
values as well, said McGovern. Its been exciting
to see how each project we complete sparks more questions and
interest.
For more information,
e-mail Cathy Engstrom,
Director of Communications, or call (515) 288-1846.
Back to the news
archive
Top
of Page
© Copyright 2009 Iowa Natural Heritage Foundation
Comments? Suggestions? Email INHF Webmaster
|