Lester Behrns started collecting arrowheads at age 8 when work crews came to the flat bluff tops above Wabasha, Minn., where his German grandfather homesteaded in the 1890s.
"Found my first one when they dug them light poles -- must have been 1942," said Behrns, 77, fingering a rose-colored arrow tip. "Back in those days, we still worked with horses and I found a load of them cultivating corn."
Over the years, this vista overlooking the Mississippi River has been Behrns' only home, not to mention the home of one of Minnesota's quirkiest collections of artifacts.
That's about to change.
Behrns is calling it quits at the end of this month. He'll shutter his 25-year-old Arrowhead Bluffs Museum, move to Cody, Wyo., with his wife, Shirley, and auction off his eclectic collection, which has mushroomed to include thousands of arrowheads, spear points, fishing lures, literally every model of Winchester rifle ever made and dozens of mounted full-body hunting trophies, from musk ox to caribou.
He has a mosaic of a buffalo made with 1,471 bison teeth, a 12,000-year-old mammoth tusk, turtle traps, duck eggs and even a stuffed longhorn bull above a scale replica of Dodge City, Kan., in the cattle-driving era.
History buffs and antique aficionados have just a few weeks to plunk down the $5 fee and visit Behrns' bluff-top museum before his collection disappears through a series of online auctions.
"It's definitely worth a visit because here's a guy who is so rooted in this place and has poured his whole heart and soul into this," said Macalester College geography professor David Lanegran, who spent hours in the museum recently. "I loved it because it's not very often you see somebody who's got the courage to put their personality on display for anyone who wants to come in and see."