The Peak to Prairie Project is a large-scale conservation initiative focusing on key resources in El Paso, Pueblo, Lincoln and Crowley Counties. The project involves many partners and stretches from Cheyenne Mountain in the west to the western half of Lincoln and Crowley Counties in the east, from the City of Colorado Springs in the north to the City of Pueblo and the Arkansas River in the south. The project covers over 2.1 million acres of prairie, creek, mountain and plains. Click here for a more detailed look at this area (opens a 2mb PDF). 
Colorado Open Lands and The Nature Conservancy are proud to present the results of the Peak to Prairie Planning Grant, funded by the Great Outdoors Colorado Trust Fund Board. The results of the Planning Grant are documented in the Peak to Prairie Conservation Plan (clicking this link will open a very large PDF file - 13mb) which describes the planning process, partners, and resources, along with implementation strategies. Click here to read the related article.
Within this region are valuable resources such as working agricultural operations, scenic vistas, threatened wildlife habitat, intact prairie ecosystems, military assets, and open space.
The goal of the project is to preserve and protect these resources by knitting together and protecting public and private lands. The resulting landscape will be a relatively intact landscape in one of the last remaining stretches of unfragmented land along Colorado’s Front Range.
The Peak to Prairie project area has diverse threats to its appearance, agricultural heritage, and open space. Significant impacts of rapid growth include:
There is still time to protect large areas like the Peak to Prairie project area at a reasonable cost, before these lands are converted to other uses and their unique agricultural, natural, scenic, and open space values are lost forever.
Powerful partners including Colorado Open Lands, The Nature Conservancy, Colorado State Parks, El Paso and Pueblo Counties, Colorado Springs Utilities, USDA’s Natural Resource Conservation Service and most significantly the U.S. Department of Defense are working together to secure the necessary funding sources to complete this project.
Ft. Carson Military base has a two-fold goal of protecting its boundaries from encroachment by residential development while preserving important habitat for plants and animals that depend on the prairie landscape.
This list represent our financial partners in the project, there are many more stakeholders participating in Peak to Prairie’s work.
Your support is critical to our ongoing success in helping willing Colorado landowners preserve and protect the great natural, cultural, and working landscapes of Colorado. You can help support this project and Colorado Open Lands’ ongoing efforts by:
Through a landowner initiated effort, Colorado Open Lands has protected 1,185 acres through 5 conservation easements to date. Additionally, three more easements are expected to be completed by the end of the year.
Click here to view completed projects list.
Ninety-eight percent of our revenue goes directly to our land conservation programs.