The Lloyd Center for the Environment is a non-profit organization that provides educational programs on aquatic environments in southeastern
New England in the United States.
The Lloyd Center’s 55 acres (220,000 m2) of
estuary and maritime forest in South
Dartmouth, Massachusetts, was donated to the Dartmouth Natural Resources Trust in 1978 by Karen Lloyd as a living memorial to her mother, Katharine Nordell Lloyd. Lloyd Center programming began in 1981.[1] Five walking trails offer scenic views of the
Slocum River,
Buzzards Bay,
Demarest Lloyd State Park,
Mishaum Point, and
Cuttyhunk Island. The
Chaypee Woods Trail snakes its way through stone walls that hearken back to farming days when dairy cattle, ducks, and chickens were raised there. Steep steps and slopes mix with the vistas of the
salt marsh, oak-hickory forest, freshwater
wetlands,
kettleholes,
moraine, and a Native American
midden site.
References
^"History". Lloyd Center for the Environment. Retrieved December 4, 2017.
The Lloyd Center for the Environment is a non-profit organization that provides educational programs on aquatic environments in southeastern
New England in the United States.
The Lloyd Center’s 55 acres (220,000 m2) of
estuary and maritime forest in South
Dartmouth, Massachusetts, was donated to the Dartmouth Natural Resources Trust in 1978 by Karen Lloyd as a living memorial to her mother, Katharine Nordell Lloyd. Lloyd Center programming began in 1981.[1] Five walking trails offer scenic views of the
Slocum River,
Buzzards Bay,
Demarest Lloyd State Park,
Mishaum Point, and
Cuttyhunk Island. The
Chaypee Woods Trail snakes its way through stone walls that hearken back to farming days when dairy cattle, ducks, and chickens were raised there. Steep steps and slopes mix with the vistas of the
salt marsh, oak-hickory forest, freshwater
wetlands,
kettleholes,
moraine, and a Native American
midden site.
References
^"History". Lloyd Center for the Environment. Retrieved December 4, 2017.