
Perry Farm Conservation Easement
482 acresWorking with Wallowa Land Trust, landowners Lou and Deyette Perry voluntarily established a 482-acre conservation easement on their working farm that extinguishes development of one homesite, maintains working lands, and conserves habitat forever. This project is in addition to a growing list of properties under permenant protection on the iconic East Moraine.
'This easement, which still allows me to manage the property and maintain it as a working landscape, was a perfect opportunity to both protect the moraine and ensure that it didn't just get locked up as a park or preserve,' Lou Perry said.
The 482-acre Perry property encompasses portions of the eastern lateral moraines over to the top of the East Moraine's crest. The Perry's have also left open the opportunity to grant a trail easement and public access, where a section of the informal East Moraine trail bisects their farm. The conserved farm is directly adjacent to the 176-acre Quint and 52-acre Ham conservation easements, which Wallowa Land Trust completed in 2019 and 2017, respectively.
'The Perry Farm is a unique and important piece of property, and its conservation is a great achievement,' said Eric Greenwell, Wallowa Land Trust's Conservation Program Manager. 'Not only does it have fertile soils for farming and provide habitat for grassland birds and mule deer in the winter, when times are hard, but it is a key piece of a community vision to conserve Wallowa Lake's East Moraine and the heart of Northeast Oregon. With this project complete, and the potential purchase of another 1,800 acres of the East Moraine in 2020, we are all working together to establish a corridor of open space and habitat from the Wallowa Mountains to the valley floor.'
Lou has a long history on the land of the new easement. He grew up out on upper Prairie Creek with the Moraines as his backdrop. Perry said, 'When I was still in high school, I leased much of the property now protected for my sheep operation.' At the age of 19 he bought the first parcel and has added to it ever since. He moved to Tennessee for school, where he met his wife Deyette, before moving back to the county. Today, Lou leases out the land to grow crops including grain and wheat.
Lou and Deyette Perry at the closing
Perry has been working with the Land Trust for a number of years to establish a conservation easement. 'It [the easement] maintains both the scenic values we all cherish, and keeps it in productive use,' Perry explained,' I am happy to leave this as a legacy to the County and future generations.'
While this project is another victory for the East Moraine, more work remains to be done to secure this iconic landform. The Perry Farm is part of a much larger effort by the Wallowa Lake Moraines Partnership to permanently protect the entire East Moraine. Fundraising efforts continue to secure the neighboring 1,791-acre Ronald C. Yanke Family Trust Property. Its successful acquisition and conveyance to Wallowa County would preserve over 80% of Wallowa Lake's East Moraine and create a continuous corridor from the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest and Eagle Cap Wilderness to the Wallowa Valley floor. Of the $6.5 million needed to purchase the Yanke Family Trust's Property, the Partnership has raised $5.7 million. More information on this effort can be found at www.morainecampaign.org.