Little Tennessee River
Another two miles of the famous river conserved
A
recent donation of a conservation easement to the Land Trust for the Little
Tennessee (LTLT) protects close to a half mile of Little Tennessee River frontage upstream of McCoy Bridge in northern Macon County. The easement was conveyed by partners in Melcar, LLC who acquired the land in 2005. While the owners are evaluating poss ible develop- ment designs for the upland portion of the property, they were commit- ted to conserving the floodplain and riverfront area. "We are very interested in preserving the quality of the river for future generations," said Mike Maher "We understand that it is not a replaceable resource and action to protect it now is our contribution to the community."
The conservation agreement prohibits subdivision and building along 2300' of river frontage and adjacent floodplain while retaining
the possibility for agricultural and recreational use of the land. The protected land lies directly across the river from land conserved by LTLT in 2005, and lies less than a quarter mile downstream of the Welch Farm which was conserved under a working farm conservation easement last December.
Also in December of 2006 LTLT facilitated a State of North Carolina purchase from Duke Energy of 89 acres on the river near Queen Branch creating an expansion of the Needmore Game Lands. This was followed in March of this year by LTLT's acquisition of the Cowee Mound and over one-half mile of river frontage. After securing permanent protection of the floodplain and property surrounding the Mound, LTLT conveyed title of this exceptional cultural heritage site to the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians.
Over the past eight months LTLT has conserved a total of
242 acres and over two miles of Little Tennessee River frontage in northern
Macon County. The 25- mile reach of free-flowing Little Tennessee River
downstream of the Town of Franklin is the most ecologically-intact river system
in the southern Blue Ridge. Since 2001 LTLT has been instrumental in conserving
nearly two-thirds of this river corridor. Today the NC Wildlife Resources
Commission manages the Needmore Game Lands spanning some 4716 acres and nearly
28 miles of river frontage while LTLT oversees 412 acres and over 4 miles of
river frontage on 13 sites under conservation easement or directly owned by the
Land Trust.