200+
Properties
215,000+
Acres Protected
400+
Miles of Trails
800+
Conservation Easements
10,000+
Members
400+
Volunteers
View from a mountaintop with blue skies and leafless trees

Together, We Protected the Top of Mt. Kearsarge

Thanks to the generosity of our supporters, 230 acres at the summit of Mt. Kearsarge are now conserved. Your support helped complete this important project and ensure these forests remain protected for generations to come. Stay tuned!

Nye property

Support the Annual Fund

We're celebrating 125 years of protecting the places that make our state special—forests, trails, rivers, and wildlife habitat. Your gift to the Annual Fund helps us continue this legacy, supporting conservation, stewardship, and recreation for today and the next century plus.

Forest Society News & Updates

Cottrell Baldwin Lecture

Like a strong forest landscape, 2026 Cottrell-Baldwin lecture series showcases variety

March 3, 2026

The New Hampshire Division of Forests and Lands and Forest Society have announced the 2026 Cottrell-Baldwin Environmental Lecture Series, a free four-part program on New Hampshire’s forest history, health, and future. The series runs March 17–April 7 at the Henry I. Baldwin Environmental Center in Hillsborough.

Creek Farm entrance in winter

Forest Journal: Seasonal Shifts: How New Hampshire wildlife endures the cold even in a changing climate

Kaity Stanton | February 20, 2026

As winter settles in, New Hampshire’s wildlife relies on time-tested strategies—from hibernation to snow-savvy movement—to survive the cold. But while this season feels especially harsh, long-term data from NOAA show winters are warming overall, with real consequences for forest ecosystems and the animals that depend on them.

Winter conifers

Something Wild: Snow falling on conifers

Dave Anderson | February 19, 2026

Winter forests are full of hidden microclimates, from snow-sheltered deer yards beneath conifers to sun-warmed tree wells in hardwood stands. As explored on Something Wild, these subtle snow patterns shape how wildlife survives the coldest months.