The modern pheasant hunter, like the modern duck hunter, has much to worry about. Farmers' conservation acres are giving way to corn and soybeans. Wetland drainage continues. And kids in our ever-more urbanized society seem more deeply intrigued by video games and text messaging than getting outside to fish or hunt.
Yet on the eve of the state's pheasant season, and as Pheasants Forever (PF), the state's homegrown national bird club, prepares to celebrate its 30th anniversary at PheasantFest in Minneapolis in February, it's important to remember that the hard times conservation is experiencing now won't last forever -- providing enough people who value the outdoors stay engaged in protecting it.
It's important to remember as well that today's so-called hard times don't appear quite so hard when given historical context.
Example: When Pheasants Forever was founded in 1982, no organization existed to carry the upland conservation banner to the Capitol in St. Paul, much less to the Capitol in Washington.
Today, PF has more than 130,000 members and professional staff across the nation, including in Washington.
Hard times?
When PF's founding board of directors voted to hold a fundraising banquet at the old Prom Ballroom in St. Paul in April 1983, it was uncertain whether anyone would come.
But more than 800 did, including a who's-who of Minnesota politics and conservation, from then-Gov. Rudy Perpich, to famed outdoorsman and duck hunter Jimmy Robinson, Vikings coach Bud Grant and Sports Afield columnist Grits Gresham, among many others.