One of the first lessons Ben Sutton gleaned in college came not in the classroom, but from the school of life: Be careful what you wish for.
After growing up on a farm in Seneca, Wis., his ardent desire had been "to get away from the animals and all that stuff." His first year at La Crosse's Viterbo University changed all that.
"When I got there, I was not sure what I wanted to do," he said. "After a while, I realized I really honestly missed animal stuff."
A decade and a half later, Sutton, 36, is the Minnesota Zoo's reigning "Zookeeper of the Year" for his collaboration with leopards and tigers and bears (oh, my).
Sutton did forge one distinct path: He went from working with domestic livestock to animals that cannot be domesticated. His feral coterie includes not only big cats and bigger bears but also boars and wild dogs known as dholes. He works with carnivores on the Northern Trail and trains bears named Sadie, Kenai and Haines at Russia's Grizzly Coast.
The St. Paul resident has become a bit attached. Asked about the worst part of his job, Sutton said, "We work with them every day of their lives, and they get sick and die. You do get connected. They're certainly not pets, but it's very hard when you lose an animal."
Sutton had more to say about getting up close and "personal" with his non-human sidekicks.
Q: What is mastery? What makes an excellent trainer?