25 Pivotal
Projects
People often ask
Iowa Natural Heritage Foundation staff members to name our "favorite"
or "most important" of our nearly 600 completed land
projects (and countless more educational or other non-land projects).
There's no easy answer.
Howeverthough
INHF's mission remains unaltered since 1979a few projects
significantly influenced how we implement that mission, how we
and other groups "do" conservation, how outsiders perceive
INHF or how we perceive ourselves. So, while we won't claim the
following 25 projects are necessarily INHF's most pivotal, each
has a story to telland their combined stories tell a lot
about this organization.
1)
INHF's magazine
INHF has always emphasized
communications. We converted our member newsletter to a magazine
format early onand we've since expanded the magazine's size,
photography, color and content. One of the most frequent responses
to its gorgeous nature photography is "I never knew Iowa
was so beautiful"music to our ears! We're constantly
reminded that long-term conservation means working both on the
land and on people's view of the land.
2)
Whitham Woods
INHF's first completed project was unanticipated.
In 1980 Daisy Iowa Whitham donated 130 wooded acres near Fairfield,
asking INHF to be her "eyes into the future." Since
then, INHF has worked with hundreds of other Iowans who want peace
of mind about the future of their land's natural features.
3) Mines of Spain
For
its second land project, INHF tackled a site many others had tried
and failed to protect. In addition to historic Spanish lead mines
and Julien Dubuque's gravesite, this Dubuque site contains 1300
wooded acres and 3.5 miles of Mississippi River blufflands frontage.
INHF helped the landowner see the tax benefits of a bargain sale
and then arranged for more than $3 million in federal, state and
private funding. Completed in the final days of 1980, this project
quickly established our fledgling group as a "can-do"
organizationable to handle big budgets, multiple partners
and significant natural resources.
4) Iowa's Natural Heritage
book
In
1982 INHF and the Iowa Academy of Science published Iowa's Natural
Heritage, a coffee-table book that celebrates Iowa's natural resources
with text and stunning color photos. It was INHF's signature education
and communications piece for many yearsand it's still used
in some college classrooms. This experience guided us through
many future publishing endeavors, including guides for landowners
and trail users, but this book remains our most ambitious publication.
5) Cedar Valley Nature
Trail/Heritage Trail
In
the early 1980s, building trails along Iowa's abandoned railroad
corridors was a new and controversial idea. At the request of
local partners, INHF helped sort through the complicated legal,
real estate and political issues that surround trails. Once the
52-mile Cedar Valley Nature Trail (Cedar Rapids to Cedar Falls/Waterloo)
and 26-mile Heritage Trail (Dyersville to Dubuque) were complete,
more people recognized their value for wildlife habitat, prairie
restoration, economic development and quality of life. Spurred
by these early successes, INHF has since helped local partners
create about half of Iowa's "rail-trails."
6) 1985 Farm Bill
The 1985 Federal Farm Bill contained the
first provisions for private conservation easements held by the
USDA. INHF worked with Iowa's Congressional delegation in drafting
those provisions and organizing support from national organizations.
The program's success influenced several future USDA easement
efforts, like the popular Wetland Reserve Program. Today INHF
works through the Midwest Sustainable Agriculture Working Group
and others to shape federal conservation programs. Meanwhile,
we support rural landowners through our publications, website
and staff contacts. With 98% of Iowa's land in private ownership,
such work is a critical part of conservation.
7) Meredith Marsh
INHF assembled this Hancock County site
through three purchases during 1988-89. Meanwhile, we assembled
diverse funders and partnersranging from federal and state
government to Ducks Unlimited to Forest City middle schoolers
(who raised funds by selling gum-chewing permits). Now owned by
the Iowa DNR and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the site's once-drained
lake beds and prairie potholes have been restoredproviding
numerous wildlife and recreation opportunities. INHF and partners
have since restored thousands of wetland acres throughout the
state.
8) Iowa River Greenbelt
Since 1987, INHF has partnered with a unique
coalition of citizens, communities and other levels of government
to protect and promote the scenic Iowa River in Hardin County.
The Iowa River Greenbelt Resource Trust (a special committee of
INHF) developed a comprehensive plan for the greenbelt, outlining
a mix of wilderness areas, recreation areas, trails and scenic
drivesadding private sector support to work that the Hardin
County Conservation Board had been doing for years. This master
plan helped the county win many state and federal grants, get
an eco-friendly design for the new Highway 20 bridge and protect
hundreds of acres for wildlife and recreation. This greenbelt
was INHF's first regional planning project but, thanks to its
success, not our last.
9) Dickinson County Clean
Water Alliance
In 1989, INHF helped form an alliance of
public and private groups to protect Iowa's "Great Lakes."
INHF hired the first Alliance coordinatorand remains an
active partner today. By developing joint plans and priorities,
the Alliance has brought in millions of state and federal dollars.
It has protected thousands of acres through public acquisition
and private conservation easements, often with INHF assistance.
INHF has since encouraged alliances in other watersheds, including
Clear Lake and the Raccoon River.
10) Trees Forever
In 1989 Iowa's fledgling Trees Forever organization
asked INHF to lend its management and fiscal expertise. The group
stayed under INHF's wing from 1990-1994while we helped them
organize funding and new programs. By 1994 Trees Forever was a
thriving, statewide organization in its own right-with tree-planting
programs in numerous Iowa communities. Though not on such an extensive
scale, INHF has helped launch or foster several other groups:
the Iowa Environmental Council, Salisbury House Foundation and
numerous watershed alliances.
11) Hitchcock Nature
Area
Once a popular YMCA camp in Iowa's Loess
Hills, this site's subsequent owner began constructing a landfill
on its unstable soilsthen filed for bankruptcy. After years
of persistent effort to block further destruction and clear two
bankruptcies from the site, INHF purchased it at a sheriff's sale
in 1991. We transferred it to the Pottawattamie County Conservation
Board. Now expanded, Hitchcock is the county's premiere parkfeaturing
native and restored prairie, wildlife habitat, trails and many
public programs and events. Hitchcock taught us never to give
upa lesson that was reinforced when we secured another beautiful
park addition in 2004.
12) Woodford-Ashland
Lone Tree Point Nature Area
In 1992 Marcia and Jim Connell and their
family donated a conservation easement on 101 acres, which includes
4300 feet of undeveloped shoreline along Clear Lake. Unlike most
easement donors, the Connells still allow public hiking and picnicking
on their privately owned land. Meanwhile, INHF staff continue
to advise them in managing and restoring the landscape. Lone Tree
wasn't our first conservation easement, but it was the first to
get statewide media attentionand it paved the way for a
surge of later easement donations.
13) Iowa by Trail
Because natural resources won't stay protected
unless people experience and appreciate them, INHF published Iowa
by Traila book of trail maps and descriptionsin 1992.
Now in its fourth edition, this popular book inspired many other
"get outdoors" promotionssuch as our website's
"Explore Iowa" section (an online guide to enjoying
Iowa's outdoors), the annual Statewide Prairie Rescue (a multi-organization
effort to help Iowans see and save our prairies) and the "25
outdoor events" campaign honoring our 25th anniversary.
14) Chichaqua Bottoms
Greenbelt
When the 1993 floods brought significant
federal wetland funding to Iowa, INHF targeted key sites for extensive
public wetland/habitat complexes-including the old Skunk (Chichaqua)
River floodplain. Thanks to great landowner participation (helped
by INHF's willingness to accommodate their needs with like-kind
exchanges and other assistance) and partners like the Polk County
Conservation Board and Iowa DNR, this greenbelt now extends more
than 10 miles in Polk and Jasper counties. More than half its
8000 acres were acquired with INHF assistance. Chichaqua reminds
us thateven in metropolitan countiesit's still possible
to restore extensive habitat and recreation areas, but these dwindling
opportunities require planning, quick action and strong partners.
15) Horseshoe Bend division
of Port Louisa National Wildlife Refuge
Horseshoe Bendnear where the Iowa
River joins the Mississippi in Louisa Countywas devastated
by the 1993 floods. That and decades of smaller floods convinced
local farmers to dissolve this entire levee district. INHF coordinated
funding and implemented 27 land deals to acquire the floodplain
habitat, while helping landowners acquire better crop ground.
At 2,600 acres and $2 million, Horseshoe Bend remains one of INHF's
most complex and proudest achievementsand is nationally
recognized as a model for alternative floodplain management.
16) South Pine Creek
INHF has completed six projects along South
Pine Creek in Winneshiek County, one of the few Iowa streams to
harbor native brook trout. Our staff began personally contacting
stream-side landowners in 1994discussing voluntary management
and protection options in this fragile habitat. Thanks to partnerships
with these landowners, private organizations like the Hawkeye
Flyfishing Association and public groups like the Iowa DNR, some
stream sections are now open for public fishing while others are
protected by private conservation easements. We continue to protect
this and other cold-water streams.
17) Snyder Heritage Farm
A.C.
and Gladys Snyder donated their Polk County farm to INHF in 1991.
Since then, our staff and interns have planted more than 60 acres
of native prairie species, created wetlands and begun restoring
the native oak savanna. Though still a work in progress, Snyder
Farm may be INHF's best demonstration of our increasing commitment
to not only land protection, but also long-term land stewardship.
18) Internship program
In
1986 the R.J. McElroy Trust of Waterloo funded one college intern
to see if we could help college students grow and if they could
further our mission. With that initial success and the Trust's
long-term supportrecently supplemented by additional fundingINHF
now hires a dozen interns per year. Their talent and energy are
especially evident in our communications and land stewardship
efforts. In addition to doing meaningful work, our interns get
a broad education in nonprofit organizations and Iowa conservation.
Many interns say the experience influenced their later careers.
They've certainly influenced us.
19) REAP
Though
not a lobbying organization, INHF worked with multiple partners
to create Iowa's Resource Enhancement and Protection (REAP) program,
which invests state funds in parks, trails, soil and water conservation,
environmental education and historic preservation. Created in
1989, REAP is a national model for conservation funding and has
provided nearly $156 million to programs and projects in every
Iowa county. REAP works because it unites conservation groups
around a shared vision, and we've repeated that model on issues
ranging from trails to water quality.
20) Mississippi River
Blufflands Alliance
Ecosystems don't end conveniently at state
borders. That's why, in 1993, INHF and similar organizations in
three other states created the Blufflands Alliance, a group devoted
to protecting the beautiful blufflands region of the upper Mississsippi
River. Thanks to supportive private landowners and significant
financial support from the McKnight Foundation, the Alliance has
protected about 15,000 acres in the four-state area. By working
together, INHF and our partners have attracted millions of dollars
in private and federal funding to address local and regional conservation
challenges.
21) Wabash Trace Nature
Trail
INHF began working with the Southwest Iowa
Nature Trails, Inc., (SWINT) in 1988 and soon acquired the 768-acre
Wabash Trace Nature Trail corridor. Built in segments and finally
completed in 1998, this 63-mile trail connects Council Bluffs,
Mineola, Silver City, Malvern, Imogene, Shenandoah, Coin and Blanchard.
Aided by incredible grassroots support and thousands of donors,
it became the first trail linking communities in western Iowa.
Like many other INHF trails, it has spurred expansions (like the
Council Bluffs and Omaha trail systems) and is now part of the
region's tourism promotion.
22) Landowner's Options
Before 1982, Iowa's landowners could get
publications on land management techniquesbut not on how
to permanently protect those management efforts. INHF met that
need by publishing The Landowner's Options—adapted from publications in other states to fit Iowa's landscapes and law. Now in its sixth edition (and on our website), this free booklet introduces interested landowners to 18 protection options-from conservation easements to bargain sales. INHF has since created other landowner publications—like A
Bird's Eye View (2003), which advises landowners on protecting
habitat for migrating birds, and our upcoming woodland stewardship
guide.
23) Heritage Addition
to Effigy Mounds National Monument
This project1,045 acres in Allamakee
County-literally took 20 years, $1.5 million and an act of Congress.
Its complexity and value are reflected in its diverse funders:
the National Park Service (because the addition expands the national
monument), the Iowa Department of Transportation (because it's
along a scenic byway), the Iowa Department of Cultural Affairs
(because it contains effigy mounds) and more than 1000 private
donors (because they recognized this rare opportunity). Though
INHF completed this project in 2000, it continues to inspire our
staff and board when we're contemplating other important, yet
demanding, projects.
24) Upper Iowa River
The Upper Iowa River is Iowa's only site
eligible for designation as a National Wild and Scenic River,
so INHF has a long history here. We protected a portion of Chimney
Rocks and the palisades in 1987and then river access points
in 1989. Public interest in protecting this corridor surged in
the late 1990s in response to increasing development along once-pristine
bluffs. Since 2000, we've helped local landowners place 15 conservation
easements that protect more than 1500 acres, including the rest
of the Chimney Rocks area.
25) INHF website
Since
its tentative launch in 1997, INHF's website (www.inhf.org) has
become critical to our public education goals. Initially designed
to provide basic organizational information and news for our members,
the site now offers resourceslike "Explore Iowa"
and "Ecology College"for students, landowners,
tourists and outdoor enthusiasts. We recently added monthly e-mails
to guide members and others to new web highlights. Thanks to intern
support, we update the site almost daily and can host partner
siteslike the annual Statewide Prairie Rescue pages. Our
website has changed how we communicate with INHF members and how
others learn about INHF and Iowa's outdoor treasures.
Page updated May
2004
For more information,
e-mail Cathy Engstrom,
director of communications, or call (515) 288-1846.
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