Hawthorne Valley’s Biodiversity Trail began with a desire to sustain biodiversity within a working farm landscape while helping people better understand the ecosystems around them. The trail moves through pasture, wet meadow, and forest edge habitats alive with pollinators, migratory birds, amphibians, and seasonal plant communities. The vision emerged through collaboration among farmers, ecologists from the Farmscape Ecology Program, and students from Hawthorne Valley Waldorf School’s Ecology Club, who helped map the trail and identify areas of ecological and agricultural significance.
In partnership with the youth conservation organization Greenagers, local students helped build the first stretch of the trail by laying stone paths, creating stream crossings, and shaping trails through wet meadow and forest hillside terrain. The trail now includes hand-painted interpretive signs and poetry-inscribed benches created through community collaboration.
Funding will support the next phase of the trail: expanding trail sections, coordinating volunteer stewardship days and public walks, creating additional signage and artistic installations, and building long-term systems for community involvement and care. Over the next year, the trail will continue evolving as a shared public space where agriculture, ecology, education, and art meet on the land itself.
This project is not accepting donations yet. Explore the story, places, and evidence — or follow Hawthorne Valley Association for updates.
Evidence and reviews live on the open ATProto network and can be inspected by anyone.