4. Priority Areas of Conservation A. SIGNIFICANT RESOURCE AREAS greenway areas, into six Significant Resource Areas (see Exhibit 4.1). These Significant This Open Space and Farmland Plan identifies Resource Areas are a synthesis of overlapping lay- the key issues facing open space and agricultural ers of important resources and existing land con- resources in the Town, highlights the location servation patterns and this Plan recommends and importance of these resources, and provides that land conservation efforts by the Town should a framework for collaborative efforts for their be focused within these areas: conservation. The inventory of the existing natu- ral resources, agriculture lands, and open spaces 1. Gretna Road / Salt Point Area that contribute to the Town’s character, as described in Chapter 3, provides the basic envi- 2. VanWagner Road Area ronmental data and analysis necessary to make 3. Wappinger Creek Corridor qualified judgments on which areas would pro- vide the greatest benefit and are worthy of closer 4. Traver Road / Drake Road Area consideration for conservation. 5. Pine Hill Area The 2009 Pleasant Valley Town Comprehensive 6. Taconic East Area Plan laid the groundwork for land conservation Land conservation is already taking root in most policy in the Town. As part of the Town Plan, of these areas as some large landowners have three important greenway areas were identified; already recognized the importance of conserving the Wappinger Creek corridor, the area to the open space. This is evidenced by the more than east of the Taconic State Parkway bordering the 500 acres of land, which have been preserved via Town of Washington, and the rural/agricultural voluntary private conservation easement areas in the north and west sections of Town. agreements. This Plan expands upon the foundation estab- lished in the 2009 Town Comprehensive Plan, by providing additional detail on identified gre- enway areas and their specific environmental and natural resource characteristics. As such, this Plan apportions the three originally identified 61 4 Priority Areas of Conservation 62 Exhibit 4.1—Significant Resource Areas 63 4 Priority Areas of Conservation 1. GRETNA ROAD / SALT POINT AREA Fertile agricultural soils extend westward from Identified as a ‘Greenway Area’ of the Town by the Wappinger Creek to high quality lands in the the 2009 Pleasant Valley Comprehensive Plan, Towns of Clinton and Hyde Park. Most of the the Gretna Road / Salt Point Area traverses most Town’s working agricultural enterprises operate of the north and west sections of Town, in and from this area including Hahn Farm (which around the hamlet of Salt Point and along the operates a Farm Market and offers fall harvest Gretna Road and Salt Point Turnpike corridors. seasonal activities), Atkins Farm (a cattle farm that serves as the western gateway to the Salt Point hamlet), and Terhune Orchards (an apple Important conservation goals in this area and peach orchard). Currently there are approxi- include preservation of working farms (agri- mately 500 acres of land in this area that are pro- cultural resources), wetland systems (critical tected through voluntary private conservation easements. habitat areas) and maintaining the Town’s rural character (scenic viewsheds). Two major tributary’s of the Wappinger Creek flow through this area supplying the larger water- Gretna Road, with its high elevation, is widely shed with clean water. The Wappinger Creek and acknowledged in Town as a significant scenic the Little Wappinger Creek flow through the road with views of rolling farmland and distant hamlet and converge to the south. The Little mountains. There are several large working farms Wappinger Creek flows over a dam in the ham- along Gretna Road as well as two small lakes, let, creating a scenic waterfall and providing a numerous small ponds, and large tracts of for- ripe opportunity for the development of some ested areas. Many of these defining resources are passive recreation activities including: fishing located on large tracts of land. and hiking. Salt Point, with its sharply defined small hamlet The Dutchess Wetlands Complex, identified as a center provides a uniquely pastoral setting and significant ecosystem by NYSDEC, includes exemplifies the scenic and agricultural character many of the wetlands in the northwest corner of that embodies Pleasant Valley’s rural beginnings Town. This wetlands system contains high biodi- and traditions. Salt Point is a unique, historic versity value with confirmed habitat patterns and farm hamlet that has, for the most part, with- sightings of Blanding’s Turtle, a New York stood the pressures of development. Active farm- Threatened Species. These wetlands also form lands right on the edge of the hamlet are, to this the headwaters for the Great Spring Creek, day, producing corn, vegetables, fruit and live- another major tributary to the Wappinger Creek. stock not only for Town residents, but also for the regional population. The hamlet center is This Gretna Road/Salt Point Turnpike areas offer surrounded by open land of exceptional pastoral some of the most scenic views in the County. beauty that is mostly devoted to agricultural pro- Many of the scenic roads identified in the 2009 duction. Protecting this farmland, which con- Town Comprehensive Plan are located northwest tributes substantially to the Town’s agricultural of the Salt Point Turnpike. economic vitality, is worthy of special attention. 64 Despite pressure from residential development and the southern portion of this area is located in since the early 1980s, land ownership remains a prime aquifer recharge area. According to comprised of mostly large parcels of agricultural adopted habitat mapping from the Town of and undeveloped land. This Plan recommends Poughkeepsie, this area contains a high potential that the Town actively encourage the develop- for Blanding’s Turtle nesting habitat that extends ment of more agricultural uses in this area in an into the Town of Pleasant Valley from the west. effort to protect agriculturally significant soils and rural character. Both VanWagner Road and Salt Point Turnpike are identified as Scenic Roads by the 2009 Town The Gretna Road/Salt Point Area provides a Comprehensive Plan and offer important scenic great opportunity for the Town to build upon the qualities of both well maintained farm structures success of existing voluntary private conservation and rolling agricultural fields and expansive easements by encouraging more voluntary par- bucolic view to the south. ticipation in permanent easement programs. Any future development that is adjacent to these pro- 3. WAPPINGER CREEK CORRIDOR tected lands should include plans to form larger Identified as a ‘Greenway Area’ of the Town by contiguous blocks of open spaces in order to fos- the 2009 Pleasant Valley Comprehensive Plan, ter habitat connectivity. the Wappinger Creek is the foremost significant natural feature in the Town of Pleasant Valley. 2. VANWAGNER ROAD AREA The Creek bisects the Town from the northeast The VanWagner Road Area is characterized by to the southwest and is flanked by steep, rocky open rolling farmland and contains a small area terrain to the east and rolling hills to the west. between West Road and the Salt Point Turnpike Ninety percent of the Town of Pleasant Valley is directly adjacent to one of the only large open located in the Wappinger Creek Watershed and areas within the adjacent Town of Poughkeepsie. its network of streams, ponds, and wetlands. Important conservation goals in this area Important conservation goals in this area include preservation of working farms (agri- shift from agriculture to the protection of cultural resources), wetland systems (critical water quality while still placing importance habitat areas) and maintaining the Town’s on habitat protection and maintenance of rural character (scenic viewsheds). scenic beauty. This area contains some of the best agricultural The lowest elevations in Town run along the soils and consequently active farms in the Town Wappinger Creek corridor and some of the steep- and these prime soils continue north and west est slopes are located between Pleasant Valley and into the adjacent Towns of Hyde Park and Salt Point along the Creek valley. The Wappinger Poughkeepsie. Creek corridor is the primary water resource in the Town and contains most of the major flood- The VanWagner Road Area borders a large NYS- plain areas. The Creek also feeds a major Zone 1 DEC wetland and contributing stream corridor groundwater aquifer, which serves as a major 65 4 Priority Areas of Conservation source of drinking water source for the Town and 4. TRAVER ROAD AND DRAKE ROAD AREA beyond. This area also contains large contiguous This Significant Resource Area, in the south- wooded areas along its banks and in the sur- central area of the Town to the east of Traver rounding elevations, especially on the eastern Road and south of Drake Road, is an extension side of the valley. Retention of natural vegetation of the large, pristine areas along the Taconic State should be required in order to maintain water Parkway. Currently, this area includes a mix of quality and overall health of the Creek. large forest tracts and scenic agricultural fields. Residential activity has primarily occurred along Because there is already significant residential the existing Town roads, creating a large contigu- and industrial development along the Creek, ous undeveloped interior. especially in the central portion of
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