DULUTH -- On a warm afternoon last week, Duluth Retriever Club president Kim Keelor looked out over the ponds and uplands that make her group's training and field-trial grounds as good as any in the Midwest, and offered a reason why the 63-year-old organization has been so successful.
"We've got two fat guys from the [Iron] Range who cook the food," she said, laughing.
In fact, the Duluth Retriever Club does have two big guys -- Joe Tieberg and Kevin Lott -- who don chef's hats for retriever field trials, hunt tests and social gatherings. Their fare is Italian, and by acclamation, exceptional and robust.
But the success of this club, which was founded in 1945 by four men who "thrived on hard work and took pride in getting things done on time," according to club lore, has depended on much more.
Not least are energetic volunteers, a public-minded spirit and -- most recently -- a willingness to take on big challenges.
This last has more to do with raising money than teaching Labradors to fetch.
"Our budget for buying the land adjoining our club was $200,000," said Tom Fait, a club member who was hanging around last week, waiting to train his Labradors.
Fait was referring to property the club has been using for many years, but would have been sold to developers if the retriever group hadn't signed a purchase deal, which it did, recently.