KHLT’s Poopdeck Platt Property in the heart of downtown Homer is the Land Trust’s home base. This almost 3.5-acre property was the homesite of Homer legend, Poopdeck Platt. Poopdeck, born Clarence Vernon Platt, purchased the property in 1956. Poopdeck passed in 2000, and KHLT purchased the property in 2002 from the Platt family estate, turning the property into KHLT main offices.
Over the last several years, KHLT has worked with National Park Service’s Recreational Trails program, local landscape architects and community members to help design and build a community trail and park. Now, The Poopdeck Trail meanders from the end of Klondike on KHLT’s property, through the woods to City of Homer property and ends at the driveway of the Homer Independent Living Center. The trail features handicap accessible ramps, educational kiosks and signs, and hand-built benches. At each trailhead are dog waste containers and leashes available to use as part of a Leash Lending program. The Homer Library currently maintains a gravel path that stretches west from the library, linking to the Poopdeck Trail. As of 2017, the library path has contained a “Story Walk” that provides a fun activity for families. The library plans to expand this trail with emphasis on the indigenous natural and cultural history of the area. |
Ninety-three and a half acres of fishing and hunting access on Deep Creek are now open to the public for recreating and will be conserved forever. Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G) operates a fish counting weir on the property during some years, which is key infrastructure needed for the management of Deep Creek fisheries for salmon. The protection of this property helps provide excellent habitat for Dolly Varden, king, pink, and coho salmon, as well as steelhead.
The property was purchased with Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council funds as a habitat protection project to protect salmon, birds, and mammal species injured by the oil spill and to enhance public recreational opportunities on Deep Creek. Kachemak Heritage Land Trust worked with Mike Booz at ADF&G, as well as Alaska Department of Natural Resources and the Bureau of Land Management to ultimately purchase the property from interested sellers. |
On August 10th, 2020, long-time local Jeanne McArthur ensured that her 25-acre property would be protected for generations to come. Jeanne accomplished her goal of creating permanent wildlife habitat and open space by donating a conservation easement on her beautiful property to Kachemak Heritage Land Trust (KHLT).
Jeanne’s protection of her property contributes to the preservation of the highly valuable Fritz Creek corridor, utilized by moose and bear to travel between their upland summer ranges in the Anchor River/Fritz Creek Critical Habitat Area and their low-lying wintering grounds along Kachemak Bay. The 750-foot stretch of Fritz Creek flowing through this property also contributes to Dolly Varden spawning habitat. Jeanne has taken her dedication one step further by creating a legacy gift in her will to give the remaining interest of her property to KHLT as ‘trade land’. This ‘trade land’ donation allows KHLT to then sell the property, with the conservation easement in place forever, to generate proceeds to support KHLT’s conservation work. The generous donation of this conservation easement by Jeanne brings the total KHLT-protected acreage in the Fritz Creek watershed to 825 acres. |
Kachemak Heritage Land Trust recently protected an additional 69.60 acres in the Stariski Creek Watershed, through which a portion of Stariski Creek runs. The Conservation Fund (TCF) acquired this property to serve as a wetland mitigation bank site. Ownership by KHLT will ensure that the mitigation site is managed, monitored, and maintained to protect salmon, steelhead trout, moose, bear, sandhill crane, and other species’ habitat present on these parcels. Of the 69.60 acres, 66.20 acres are wetlands which provide important functions and services to the area including pollution filtration, sediment control, groundwater temperature modulation, and flood management. The property formerly had two illegal fills which were removed by the Kenai Watershed Forum (KWF) to restore the wetland functions of the property. KHLT now protects 798.53 acres in the Stariski Creek Watershed.
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What We Do
Working with willing landowners, KHLT permanently protects important fish, bird and wildlife habitat as well as recreational lands on the Kenai Peninsula for the future.
Our Mission
Conserving the natural heritage of the Kenai Peninsula for future generations
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Photo CreditWith deep gratitude, KHLT thanks Mary Frische and Tom Collopy for many of their beautiful photos throughout our website.
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Hours
M-F: 9am - 5pm
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Telephone
(907) 235-5263
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