Lacawac Hiking Trails
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      • White Oak
      • Red Oak
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      • Snake ID
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      • Bat Houses
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      • Normal Fault
      • Reverse Fault
      • Strike-slip Fault
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    • Mosses & Lichen
    • Vernal Pools
    • Mushrooms
  • Warbler Trail
  • Partner Ridge Trail
  • Watres Trail
    • Edge Effect
    • Hummocks and Hollows
  • Carriage-Lakefront Trails
    • Native Fish
    • Lake Research
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    • Plankton
    • Lake Succession >
      • Oligotrophic Lake
      • Mesotrophic Lake
      • Eutrophic Lake

Partner Ridge

​In 2004, Delaware Highlands Conservancy was able to place a conservation easement on ten acres known as the Lacawac Partner Ridge, working in conjunction with the Lacawac Sanctuary and gaining partial funding through a PA Department of Conservation and Natural Resources grant.
The partner ridge trail is a 0.4 mile loop extension off of the Maurice Broun Trail. It is a beginner to moderate trail offering continued views of the forests. Take this short trail to extend your hike!  

This land will now be forever protected from development, creating a natural greenway for the local residents and preserving the view enjoyed by boaters on Lake Wallenpaupack. This property is a welcome addition for nature lovers who visit the Sanctuary to enjoy its solitude, programs and natural beauty. The tract is open for public access with hiking trails to help nature lovers enjoy the forest as they already enjoy the Sanctuary.

From the standpoint of conservation biology, this acquisition will add to the size of an already substantial preserve, thus increasing its value as a refuge for flora and fauna needing interior forest habitat. The Sanctuary is part of a larger complex of open space comprising at least three other significant parcels: the Sanctuary; Lakeland Colony, a conservation oriented community protecting 400 acres as open space; and the Heckler Farm, a private holding of 200 acres with a large expanse of wetlands. This translates into a total natural area complex of about 1,800 acres.

The Lacawac Sanctuary, with the work and help of the Delaware Highlands Conservancy, obtained this property from Tom Gigliotti. Mr. Gigliotti, along with his real estate agent Coulby Dunn, Sr. of Mountain View Realty of Greentown, were insistent on helping the community and exercised patience waiting for the Conservancy and Lacawac to gather the resources to keep this crucial parcel green and free of development.

Protection of this property was possible because of the dedication of numerous individuals including Bob Eckstein, (Lacawac trustee and Preservation Committee Chair), Sue Currier, (Delaware Highlands Conservancy Executive Director), Barbara Yeaman (Delaware Highlands Conservancy Founder), Janice Poppich (Lacawac Sanctuary Executive Director) and Tony Waldron (attorney).

Both the Lacawac Sanctuary and the Delaware Highland Conservancy depend on public support and welcome volunteers and donations. The Lacawac Sanctuary is committed to preserving our environment through proper scientific research and community education through informative and entertaining programs. It is Lacawac’s pledge to be proactive in the preserving the region’s landscape against urban sprawl and ensuring that the most important areas of ecological significance are protected from destruction and from adverse influence.

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About lacawac sanctuary

Lacawac Sanctuary Field Station and Environmental Education Center is an independent, non-profit, environmental education organization located on the shore of Lake Wallenp​aupack in the Northern Poconos.  We operate solely on program fees, memberships, sponsorships, grants and private donations from people like you

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  • Home
  • About
    • Sources
    • Contact Us
  • Visitors Center
    • Native Plant Garden
    • Bees
    • Weather Station
  • Historic Great Camp Trail
    • Connell Park
    • Sustainable Forestry
    • Hemlock Woolly Adelgid
    • Early Years
    • Field Station
  • Lake Lacawac Trail
    • White Pine
    • Eastern Hemlock
    • Sphagnum Moss
    • Blueberry Bushes
    • Bog Plants
    • Lake Lacawac
    • Glacial Bog
    • Pickerelweed
    • Diversity of Birds
    • Glacial Erratic Rock
    • American Black Bear >
      • Diet
      • Population
      • Reproduction
  • Big Lake Trail
    • Food Web
    • North American Beaver
    • Osprey
    • Watershed
    • Japanese Barberry >
      • Characteristics
      • Threat to Forest
      • Control Methods
    • Minerals & Rocks >
      • Minerals
      • Igneous Rocks
      • Sedimentary Rocks
      • Metamorphic Rocks
      • Identification
    • Sugar Maple
    • Streams
    • Hydroelectric Dam
    • Lake Wallenpaupack >
      • Electricity Generation
      • Recreation
      • Watershed Management
    • Wild Grapevines
    • Hayscented Fern
  • Maurice Broun Trail
    • Fields & Meadows
    • Stone Walls
    • Gypsy Moth Caterpillars
    • Oak Trees >
      • White Oak
      • Red Oak
      • Black Oak
    • Raccoons
    • Owls
    • Snakes >
      • Snake ID
    • Bats >
      • Bat Houses
  • Ledges Trail
    • Deer Exclosures
    • Geological Faults >
      • Normal Fault
      • Reverse Fault
      • Strike-slip Fault
    • Wild Orchids
    • Ledges
    • Ferns
    • Mosses & Lichen
    • Vernal Pools
    • Mushrooms
  • Warbler Trail
  • Partner Ridge Trail
  • Watres Trail
    • Edge Effect
    • Hummocks and Hollows
  • Carriage-Lakefront Trails
    • Native Fish
    • Lake Research
    • Aquatic Vegatation
    • Plankton
    • Lake Succession >
      • Oligotrophic Lake
      • Mesotrophic Lake
      • Eutrophic Lake