Donate and Join LEA Today!

Holt Pond

  • Midas: 3370
  • Lake Surface: 41 acres
  • Watershed:2,118 acres
  • Max. Depth: 10 feet
  • Elevation: 455 feet
  • Town: Bridgton

Holt Pond, located six miles south of Bridgton and four miles east of Naples, was one of the last ponds in the Lakes Region to remain free of shoreline development. The Lakes Environmental Association bought the first 26 acres of the Holt Pond Preserve in 1973, only three years after LEA was founded. LEA and the Loon Echo Land Trust have now preserved more than 700 acres of wetlands, forests, fields and streams. The goal of the Holt Pond Preserve is to protect habitat and provide a place for visitors to learn about the importance of watershed conservation. Visitors enjoy an extensive network of boardwalks and trails throughout the preserve.

Fishing

Holt Pond is considered to be an excellent water for management of warmwater fisheries. The surface is largely covered by floating vegetation and provides excellent habitat for largemouth bass and chain pickerel.

Holt Pond Watershed Soils

4 percent of soils in the watershed are type A soils. Type A soils tend to be well drained sands, loams, and gravels. When vegetation is removed and the soil is exposed they can be susceptible to erosion. Because they are often coarse with ample pore space, there is low runoff potential and water will not usually pool on them. These soils can be good places to site leach fields or infiltrate stormwater from a home or residence.

2 percent of soils in the watershed are type B soils. B soils have moderate infiltration rates and fine to moderate texture and soil size. They are usually made up silts and loams. Although not as well drained as A soils, they can also be good places to site leach fields and infiltrate stormwater.

74 percent of soils in the watershed are type C soils. C soils have low infiltration rates and typically have a layer that impedes the movement of water. These soils are made of sands, clays, and loams and are one of the most common soil types in western Maine.

7 percent of soils in the watershed are type D soils. D soils have a high runoff potential and very low infiltration rates. Soils with a high water table, clay or other impervious layer near the surface are typically D soils. These soils are often associated with wetlands.

10 percent of soils in the watershed are type C/D soils. C/D soils are a mix of these two soil types. They have fairly high runoff potential and low infiltration rates and often pool water.

The remaining 2 percent of the watershed is taken up by the pond.

LEA’s Efforts on Holt Pond

[mc4wp_form id="2536"]