Squam Farm

Squam Farm

Nantucket, Massachusetts 02554

Official Website
Squam Farm trail guide and map

About this Location

Squam Farm consists of nine separate parcels totaling 210 acres that have been pieced together over the last twenty years through the hard work and generosity of several individuals and organizations. These properties are directly contiguous with the Foundation’s 294-acre Squam Swamp property to the north.

The property consists of approximately 200 acres and is circled by a 1.5-mile trail over dirt roads and paths. Squam Farm was formerly used for agricultural purposes, so it is mostly meadows and fields, unlike the surrounding areas which are thickly treed. A walk through Squam Farm will showcase its great views, rolling terrain, and unique woodlands.

Much of the upland areas in Squam Farm have been mowed by a previous owner. These sites provide excellent examples of the process of vegetative succession: the change in plant species composition over time, where one natural community slowly replaces another until a stable system develops. Mowed meadows on the property currently support an abundance of grasses and perennial wildflowers such as ox-eye daisy, yarrow, hawkweed, and pasture thistle. However, interspersed among the grasses are low shrubs and vines including beaked hazelnut, bayberry, fox grape, and northern arrowwood. If annual mowing were to cease in these areas, they would quickly revert to shrub thickets – the next, intermediate stage of plant succession. In time, seedlings of taller tree species would establish themselves and eventually grow to out-shade the shrubs, thus making way for a hardwood forest community to develop.

The existing hardwood forests on this property contain 40 to 50-foot-high stands of black tupelo, red maple, sassafras, red oak, white oak, and American beech trees. Forests such as this are relatively rare on Nantucket. Settlers who arrived in the early 1600s reported that the island was covered with large trees. However, this quickly changed as they were harvested for home construction, shipbuilding, and firewood. Large areas were also cleared for growing crops and use as pasture land, resulting in the depletion of nutrients from the shallow soils. Since the decline and eventual elimination of livestock grazing in the late 1800s, taller shrubs have gradually become established in many parts of the island. The Foundation used sheep grazing at Squam Farm between 2005 and 2015 as a means of preventing shrub encroachment into some of the open fields on the property.

Squam Farm is accessed via Squidnet Road off Quidnet Road. From the Rotary, follow Milestone Road for 0.25 miles and turn left onto Polpis Road. Follow Polpis Road for 6 miles and turn left on Quidnet Road. Take the first left onto Squidnet Road and follow it for approximately 1 mile to the large parking area at the end. Visitors should enter through the gate located on the left and not enter the property through the gate on the right. The large barn and the area around it are off-limits to visitors.

Notable Trails

The AllTrails website has a description and map of a hike at Squam Farm.

Features

  • Restrooms on site

  • Wheelchair accessible trail

  • Entrance fee

Content from Official Website

Last updated March 25, 2024