StarTribune.com content is available via e-mail, mobile devices and as RSS feeds.
Iva Weir loved loons so much that she left all of her cash -- about $1.8 million -- to help protect Minnesota's official state bird.
The schoolteacher spent her childhood and summers in her native Minnesota, captivated by the loon's echoing wails, hoots and yodels in the wilderness. She left her fortune to the Nature Conservancy in Minnesota to conserve the imperiled bird's habitat.
The gift, which will be announced to the public today, is one of the largest ever given to the conservancy in Minnesota for the preservation of a single species.
"Overwhelming generosity? I'll say it is," Peggy Ladner, director of the Nature Conservancy in Minnesota, said Monday. "I was thrilled."
Weir died in 2006 in Corvallis, Ore., at 85.
She stated in her will that she wanted her estate to ensure that the loon maintained a healthy presence throughout the state. The loon was officially designated the state bird in 1961.
About $1 million of Weir's money has already been used to help conserve and manage more than 1,000 acres along the conservancy's Lake Alexander and Ordway-Glacial Lakes sites in central Minnesota, Ladner said. The group intends to acquire more land to help preserve the iconic bird.
The actions come at a time when experts say loons are dying by the thousands across the Great Lakes region due to bacterial diseases. Loons have not suffered die-offs in Lake Superior, a major flyway, but officials are keeping a watchful eye on the region.
The black-billed bird symbolized Minnesota to Weir, Ladner said.
Weir was born in Moorhead in 1921 and grew up in Bemidji, where she attended college. She also taught in International Falls. She later moved to Oregon and continued to teach until retiring in 1984.
But Minnesota never left her heart. Weir often returned during summers to see family and capture the sights and sounds of the loons.
Her niece, Chris Weir-Koetter of Bemidji, often took her canoeing, said Chris Anderson, a Nature Conservancy spokesman. When her niece spread Weir's ashes across the Mississippi River, three loons flew overhead, Anderson said.
'A frugal life'
So, where did the benevolent Weir, a schoolteacher for nearly four decades, get all of that money from?
"She saved most of her salaries. She lived a frugal life," said Anderson, adding that Weir was a longtime member of the Nature Conservancy.
"She loved our lakes, our work and wanted to help us out," Anderson said.
There are roughly 12,000 loons in Minnesota, a population second only to Alaska, according the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources.
Threats to loons, the DNR says, include "human disturbance and pollutants such as lead and mercury."
Ladner said the birds may be in decline because of growing lakeshore development and recreational needs. "I wouldn't say we have a loon problem yet," she said. "But as our population grows and seeks recreation, we need to be conscious of a species such as the loon.
"As long as we can respect the space, people and loons can get along just fine."
Terry Collins • 612-673-1790
![]() New and Used WatercraftGreat deals on pontoons, motorboats and jet skis to enjoy this summer. Go now!![]() Find Your New Car Here!25,000+ new and used vehicles from more than 100 dealers & private sellers. Search now! |
Win a Family 4 pack of tickets for a 25 minute ride with Thomas the Tank Engine along with the chance to meet Sir Topham Hatt at the Tumbleweed Express in Lakeville, MN.Win a Family 4 pack of tickets for a 25 minute ride with Thomas the Tank Engine along with the chance to meet Sir Topham Hatt at the Tumbleweed Express! Enter to win by Wednesday, July 30th at 5pm. |