A woman who has shared the best of Minnesota's outdoors with hundreds of thousands of readers will retire soon from the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources.
Kathleen Weflen, editor of Minnesota Conservation Volunteer magazine, will close her fifth-floor office door for the last time Wednesday. That will end 30 years of editing perhaps Minnesota's most-beloved magazine.
"Some readers affectionately call the Volunteer the Minnesota Geographic because it serves as a guide to our state's wild things and places," Weflen said.
A willowy woman with youthful looks, Weflen, 67, rose from associate editor to editor in chief 1989. Immediately, she began to leave her mark on a magazine first published in 1940. She reached out to the best writers, photographers and illustrators. She searched within the DNR for the best stories to tell. And she listened to readers. It all worked. The magazine has amassed so many state and national publishing awards that Weflen's walls long ago lacked space to display them.
The magazine's subscriber list has grown from 5,000 to about 115,000. This makes the Volunteer significantly larger than many popular national outdoor magazines, including Fly Fisherman, Gray's Sporting Journal, Gun Dog and Wildfowl. The Volunteer is among the nation's largest state-published outdoors magazines, said Martin Rosinky, president of Infonet Systems, a Florida firm that provides consulting services to state agencies. Age-wise, the Volunteer is likely older than 95 percent of American magazines, according to Rebecca Sterner, a Twin Cities magazine consultant.
So who is Kathleen Weflen? Here are excerpts from a conversation:
On getting started
Academically, I have an atypical past. I attended Bemidji State, the University of Oregon, St. Paul's Macalester College and nearby St. Catherine University, where I ultimately earned degrees in journalism and communications. Once I got into the business, I attended writing workshops and conferences. I remember visiting Sigurd Olson's writing shack and being so moved because inside were several copies of the Volunteer.
On her writers, photographers and illustrators
Freelance writers, photographers and illustrators provide much of the content. Our editorial staff and DNR experts also write, and DNR photographer Deb Rose goes on assignment. The magazine has been fortunate to publish so many amazing people. Sigurd Olson, Florence Jaques and Charles Kuralt, for example, were well-known voices from the past. So was John Moyle, one of the agency's most-noted biologists. In the 1990s, the late Paul Gruchow was a powerful and passionate voice. Today, we feature equally great contributors. I often wonder if readers truly know how talented they are. The images of Minnesota photographers Layne Kennedy and Jim Brandenburg, for example, appear in National Geographic.