Warren and Betty Richards Community Forest
Warren Richards was an 'old-fashioned Yankee,' supporting himself and always looking to help others, friends said. The Richardses were never rich, but they were always self-sufficient. The family had cattle, pigs and chickens. They grew vegetables - corn, peas, beans and cucumbers - and sold them at a local vegetable stand. They raised four children, living in a house on the edge of their farm. The children chipped in to weed the gardens, chop the wood, feed the cattle and can the vegetables.
From early on, the Richardses wanted to ensure that the forest would be saved from development. The land included a large rectangular rock where American Indians used to grind their corn. A brick kiln and a wood mill were once on the site, though little remains of either. In May 1972, Warren Richards approached Concord city officials about donating 150 acres, but they were hesitant to accept it. The city had no open space plan. The planning board and newly formed conservation commission turned down the offer. In 1977, the Richardses found a way to preserve their land. In a rare move for those days, they signed a conservation easement on 114 acres, which specified that the property 'shall be maintained forever as open-space devoted to agricultural, forestry and general conservation purposes.' The Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests has held the easement since.
The Richards land adjoins the 70-acre Spear Park on Sanborn Road, which was donated to the city about 10 years ago. An additional 60 acres of open space transferred from the Reserve at Stonehaven are also connected, forming a 250-acre parcel between Sanborn, Hoit, Graham and Snow Pond roads.
The city of Concord got the land in April 2009, and it is open to the public for hiking, horseback riding and cross-country skiing. The public entrance is just off Sanborn Road, through the Spear property. If only searching for a few others in this part of the forest, the cache is easiest found off the Victoria lane parking area, on the northwest area of this forest.
The cache itself is a pill canister. It resides within a "Y" where 3 trails intersect. Bring your own pen. Congratulations to a team FTF: cachingcolonel, birderchick, and militarymama. Nice work!