Mass Audubon Closes On Over 850 Acres in Becket

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BECKET, Mass. — Mass Audubon purchased Palmer Brook – the 858-acre Becket property formerly known as the Berkshire Fishing Club – on May 4, completing a years-long effort to protect a parcel that provides habitat for a wide variety of plant and animal species, enhances climate resiliency, and will eventually be a wildlife sanctuary fully open to the public.
 
In 2024, after years of conversations with the landowners who owned the property since the 1960s, they agreed to sell the property to Mass Audubon for $5 million. This will expand a 26,000-acre conservation corridor – one of the region's most significant – anchored by October Mountain State Forest consisting of 16,500 acres. Protecting large landscape corridors is key to the state's biodiversity strategy.
 
Although the opening of Palmer Brook Wildlife Sanctuary isn't planned for some time, it will eventually become one of Mass Audubon's largest wildlife sanctuaries in the Berkshires. The small lodge near the 125-acre lake may become a visitor center that eventually offers a broad range of nature education and recreation opportunities for the community.
 
This acquisition was made possible with the help of conservation partners including the Becket Land Trust, Berkshire Natural Resources Council, Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation, Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs, and many individual donations.
 
MathWorks, a Natick company, has also stepped up by donating $25 million for land conservation two years ago. Funds from that transformational commitment seeded Mass Audubon's 30x30 Catalyst Fund and were used in part for this acquisition.
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Berkshire Special Olympics Returns to Monument Mountain

iBerkshires.com Sports
GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. – Hundreds of athletes of all ages converged at Monument Mountain Regional High School Wednesday for the 45th annual Berkshire County Special Olympics meet.
 
Runners, jumpers and throwers from throughout the county put themselves to the test and were recognized for their accomplishments.
 
As always, one of the highlights of the day was the banner parade, when Special Olympians from various teams make their way around the track to be honored by the fans in attendance.
 
This year, the newly-created Lee High School/Monument Mountain Unified Sports team had the honor of leading the athletes behind a contingent of local law enforcement officers.
 
Unified Sports, an initiative of Special Olympics and the Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association, allows students with intellectual disabilities to compete in basketball in the winter and track in the summer alongside peers without disabilities while representing their schools.
 
Coaches varsity student-athletes from around South County participated in Wednesday’s event, helping to coordinate competition on two sides of the track and throughout the infield.
 
This year’s meet was dedicated to the memory of longtime Special Olympian Michele Adler, who competed for the Berkshire County-based Red Raiders team for more than 20 years and represented Massachusetts as a bowler at the 2010 USA Games.
 
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