Every
year, schools and libraries in Loon Echo’s service area of Denmark, Bridgton,
Harrison, Naples, Casco, Raymond and Sebago are invited to submit grant
applications to Loon Echo for environmental programs. These awards will help
Lake Region children learn about the environment and the importance of protecting
our region’s land and natural resources.
LELT’s
Environmental Educational Grants were developed as a memorial to local
teachers, Helen Allen and Polly Bartlett. Helen Allen owned a beautiful hilltop
farm on Quaker Ridge in Casco looking out to the western foothills and Mt.
Washington. She was one of the first to grant Loon Echo a conservation easement
on her 60-acre property so that it would be protected in perpetuity. After her
death at the age of 94, Helen Allen’s bequest to Loon Echo allowed LELT to
create an endowed environmental education fund to support yearly programs in
local schools and libraries.
Polly
Bartlett was one of the original Board members of Loon Echo. A teacher at
Sebago Elementary School, each year she treated her third graders to a winter
walk at Maine Audubon. When she died in 2000 at the age of 48, the Trust
created a fund in her memory to ensure that third graders at Sebago Elementary
would always take their winter walk.
For
more information on the program's history, or how to contribute to LELT’s
education fund, visit www.loonecholandtrust.org or call
207-647-4352.
Loon Echo Land Trust (LELT) is a member supported, non-profit
land trust that works to protect the land and natural resources of the northern
Sebago Lake region for future generations. Loon Echo conserves over 8,000 acres
of land and manages 32 miles of hiking and biking trails in the towns of
Bridgton, Casco, Denmark, Harrison, Naples, Raymond and Sebago. For more
information on, LELT preserves, upcoming events, or how to get involved, visit lelt.org.
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