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Conservancy land inspires artists
By Danna Webster
KP News
Artists from all over visited the
Key Peninsula in September for a “plein aire” painting
event. Using the Lind property in Home as their
inspiration, they sat in an open air setting and created
images. Easels, paints and water colors were put to work
reflecting on the open fields, pond, rustic outbuildings
and the adjacent Home pioneer cemetery.
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Arrangements to visit
the Lind
property and the historic Home
Cemetery may be made by calling
the Linds at 884-3347 |
The event was organized
cooperatively by the Two Waters Arts Alliance and the
Great Peninsula Conservancy. Margo MacDonald of Two
Waters said the guests were happy to be there and the
weather was sunny and wonderful. Some took time to walk
the perimeter of the nearly 80 acres of property. Most
of the artists set up in the big field below the family
home that overlooks the flower and vegetable gardens.
The hope was that some of the images produced could be
used by the Conservancy for its publications, and Two
Waters would like to have some of the work available for
its Spring Fling 2007 art show.
This was the first art event at the
Lind property but many people have visited and walked
the trails over the years since the Linds put it into a
conservation easement in 1993.
“We like to have people come and
walk,” Nancy Lind said. She explains that, although the
property is under the stewardship of the Conservancy,
the land remains the family’s private property; it is
not public property. Guests are welcome to visit the
land and are asked to call ahead before arriving.
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Information
about Two Waters
Arts Alliance is available
at
www.twowaters.org
or by calling 884-7771 |
“The Conservancy didn’t buy it.
All the easement does is to keep it from being
developed,” Lind said. She and her husband, Bob, have no
regrets about their decision to put the land into a
conservation easement. “Never had a thought that I
wanted to break it all up and sell it for money,” she
said.
The conservation easement is a
contractual agreement that the environmental and
cultural attributes of their land will remain protected.
That agreement restricts further development of the land
with regard to housing, logging or large buildings.
“They realized in the future there
would be a lot of pressure to develop the property. In
an effort to take the mystery out of the future, they
looked for ways to protect the land,” said Key Pen
resident Bruce MacDonald, president of the Great
Peninsula Conservancy.

Key Peninsula
resident and artist Tawna McGraw participates
in the Plein Aire "Paint-In" held at the Lind
Family Farm on
Sept. 9. She said she enjoyed coming to
"paint-in" for the
first time and was excited to meet new artists.
Photo by Mindi LaRose |
When a property has value to the
community — environmentally or culturally, a
conservation easement can be attached to the property
title. The easement is a legal document that restricts
the use of the land by heirs, buyers or recipients of
donated land. By putting a conservation easement on the
land, it changes its potential assets to the extent of
influencing the actual value on the property. Taxes are
adjusted accordingly. Nancy Lind estimates their current
taxes are only one third of what they would be without
the easement.
The Great Peninsula Conservancy,
based in Bremerton, is a private nonprofit land trust
dedicated to protecting open space, rural landscapes and
natural habitat in west Pierce, Kitsap and Mason
counties. It is the job of the Great Peninsula
Conservancy to initiate the easement for the owners,
monitor the boundaries of the property, and serve as
stewards to maintain the environmental and cultural
aspects.
Congress recently reviewed
conservancy easements for the IRS and passed a new bill
this year that, according to MacDonald, reaffirmed the
concept and extended some of the tax benefits. Easements
are more restrictive than zoning and therefore reduce
the value of the property. Taxes are also reduced.
MacDonald said he sees conservancy
easements as the “ultimate property right.”
“They keep the land as it is,” he
said. “The Linds are deeply attached to that property.
They love it the way it is.”
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News, all rights reserved.
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