HUTCHINSON, MINN. -- A biting breeze blew across the frozen white landscape here last week.
Most of the country is an endless expanse of plowed, snow-drifted farm fields -- a seemingly inhospitable place for wildlife.
But Mark Reinert and three friends stood in a field of golden prairie grasses and frozen wetlands -- an oasis of wildlife habitat that they helped create in McLeod County.
Just a few years ago, the 500 acres was corn or soybeans or, in winter, black earth covered with snow. And there were no wetlands.
Now, the land attracts pheasants, waterfowl, songbirds, deer and other wildlife.
"Oh yeah, the pheasants are out there," Reinert said, scanning the frozen field.
The 500 acres has been transformed for wildlife, and eventually will be open to the public to hunt, hike or bird watch.
Reinert, 47, of Glencoe, is president of the McLeod County chapter of Pheasants Forever -- a group of about 450 who have raised and spent more money for wildlife habitat than any of the other 73 state chapters. They have spent $4.2 million since they formed in 1986 -- among the tops in the nation.