The Outdoors · Finger Lakes
Connecticut Hill Makes Newfield Part of a Broad Wildlife Landscape
Connecticut Hill WMA links Newfield and Enfield to a broad public wildlife landscape, according to DEC.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 27, 2026
Connecticut Hill gives Newfield and Enfield a broad wildlife landscape beyond the usual Ithaca-area shorthand. DEC locates Connecticut Hill Wildlife Management Area across several Schuyler and Tompkins County towns, including Enfield and Newfield, and lists it at 11,237 acres.
That size changes the southwest Tompkins edge. The place is not a small park tucked beside town. DEC describes Appalachian Highlands terrain with streams, ponds, mature forests, and open meadows, with room for hunting seasons, birding, habitat work, rougher roads, and quiet wandering.
Newfield and Enfield sit beside that upland presence, which helps explain why the map can feel wilder as it reaches toward the county edge.
Living near a wildlife management area is different from living near a village green. Access, parking, dogs, hunting, and seasonal road conditions can all shape the outing. Connecticut Hill adds a large outdoor identity to the familiar mix of farms, hamlets, and the Ithaca orbit.
That gives Newfield and Enfield a wilder edge without making them feel far from everyday Tompkins County life. The hills are close enough to matter, but broad enough to feel like their own landscape.