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Wildlife & Natural Areas 

Kezar Lake and its surrounding lands draw many birds, fish, reptiles & mammals such as loons, trout, otters, eagles, ducks, turtles, weasels, deer, moose, bear, coyote, bobcat, osprey, herons, cormorant, bittern, turkeys, grouse, many wildflowers, trees, ferns. Some are year-round creatures, others migrate here to breed and raise their young, then return to their second homes.

 

Open & Protected Lands to Enjoy

Near Kezar Lake

Various wildlife habitats make up these properties in North Sutton, and at any time of year you can come across something exciting:

 

Bean Quarry, King Hill Reservation, Maple Leaf Reservation, Mildred Leffort/Enroth Gift, Enroth Natural Areas, Muster Field Farm, Town Wetlands, Wadleigh State Park, Horse Beach, Town Common, Kezar Lake Natural Area, Walden and Loys Sundell Natural Area, Chadwick Meadows, Sunapee-Ragged-Kearsarge Greenway Trails, Cascade Marsh

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Organizations Offering

Nature Events and Information

Ausbon Sargent Land Preservation Trust

Blaisdell Lake Protective Association

Kezar Lake Protective Association

Knights Hill Nature Park

The Nature Discovery Center

Lake Sunapee Protective Association

Loon Preservation Committee

Muster Field Farm

The Nature Conservancy, NH

NH Audubon

Society for the Protection of NH Forests

Sunapee-Ragged-Kearsarge Greenway (SRKG)

Sutton Conservation Commission

The Fells

UNH Cooperative Extension/

          Fish & Game/Wildlife Action Plan

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A family of loons on Kezar Lake.

Photo by Bill Chen

Loons

Kezar Lake has had nesting loons for many years. To help protect them and other species from the threat of lead toxicity, KLPA offers fishermen nontoxic fishing tackle alternatives to the lead-based sinkers used in the past (which may still linger in tackle boxes.) The Loon Preservation Committee found an increase in deaths from lead poisoning during 2017.  KLPA encourages you to bring your old lead tackle to NH Fish & Game, Hazen Drive in Concord, or to KLPA lake hosts at Horse Beach for disposal. Read about Fishing Lead-Free.

​​​Wildlife Species Occurring in NH

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NH Fish and Game:  "New Hampshire is home to more than 500 species of vertebrate animals. About 75 percent are nongame wildlife species not hunted, fished or trapped. Twenty-seven species are endangered and fourteen are threatened in the state. With your help we are able to maintain New Hampshire's rich diversity of wildlife through research, management and education projects outlined in ...the Wildlife Action Plan." 

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NH Wildlife Rehabilitators

Wildlife Habitat Land Cover in Sutton

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Native Plants

Surrounding Kezar's shore and nearby you can find wild azaelias, blueberries, button bush, ground nut, trillium, water lillies, bunchberry, winterberry and many more native species, in addition to our iconic red and white pines, birches, oaks, maples, witch hazel, beech, hemlock, alder, and many other trees, including a black locust in Wadleigh State Park. 

 

A 50-foot natural buffer along the shore or planting with species native to New Hampshire is best for good lake-water quality and for attracting wildlife. The older and more extensive their root systems, the better structure these plants provide for shoreland stability.

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Native & Exotic NH Lake Plants

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Bring Birds to Your Yard with Native Plants!

 

Life Cycle Phases & Climate Change: NH Audubon's Phenological Monitoring Project

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An American Bittern on Kezar Lake.

American Bittern near the stone bench on Keyser Street. If you hear this bird around Kezar, you understand its nicknames, such as "thunder-pumper" and "water-belcher."

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