Birding in Minnesota changed forever when Kim Eckert quit teaching, put his dog in his car, and moved to Duluth.
There, he created two tools that have defined the sport of birding for almost 40 years: statewide tours and an extremely detailed book.
Eckert, 70, came from Illinois to attend St. John's University in St. Joseph, Minn. He got his degree, became a teacher and grew bored. He quit to move to Duluth, known then — and now — as the best place to bird in the state.
"I was broke for a couple of years," he said, "living off savings and part-time jobs like substitute teaching and bird surveys."
Things changed in 1979, when he began what has become a popular touring business, Minnesota Birding Weekends (MBW). Since then, he's led more than 400 weekend tours in all 87 Minnesota counties, as well as 100 weeklong trips in other states. (Eckert also has guided birding trips throughout North America for a national tour company.) This year, MBW (mbw birds.com) will sponsor 15 birding trips to the North Shore and more than 20 counties.
For his early Minnesota trips, birders traveled in car caravans held together with the latest technology — CB radios.
But his trips were — and continue to be — popular for the simple reason that he finds birds. If you had been on all of his Minnesota trips, you could have seen 362 different species.
"In all my 42 years of birding," said Laura Erickson, "I've never met a birder who is more consistently helpful in making sure as many people as possible get to see the birds they're looking for."