Bill Urseth peered at the blackened remains of his Minnesota Horse and Hunt Club clubhouse and restaurant, a crumbling hole in the ground littered with charred debris.
"There's nothing left," he said.
The rustic amber log building with stone fireplaces, brimming with elk, deer and other wildlife mounts and antler chandeliers, is only a memory now after a New Year's Eve fire destroyed the club's headquarters.
"We're going to rebuild," said Urseth, 64, of Prior Lake, co-owner of the business — a well-known Minnesota destination for shooters, hunters, dog trainers and horse aficionados. Besides five sporting-clay target-shooting courses, the club in rural Prior Lake offers hunting for pheasants, waterfowl, turkey and other game birds, and also has rifle and pistol shooting ranges.
"We shoot about 40,000 pheasants a year," Urseth said.
The club also has horse boarding, training and riding lessons and hunting-dog breeding, training and a kennel.
About 1,000 members belong to the club, but it also drew the public to the restaurant — Triggers Saloon and Super Club — for a meal, wedding or conservation fundraisers. Youth hunts on the club's 600 wooded acres and firearms safety training classes also are routinely held. The sporting-clay courses also are open to the public.
The clubhouse-restaurant was the focal point and gathering place.