OWATONNA - Blue-winged teal were landing on the pond at daybreak Saturday even before Jim and Karen Killen settled into their blind.
"I was throwing out decoys and the birds were trying to come in," Jim Killen said.
No matter. The ducks kept coming.
"We shot six in the first 10 minutes," said Killen, 77, of Owatonna, a well-known wildlife artist and conservationist. They ended the morning at 8:30 a.m. with seven.
Not bad for slough that had been a corn field a decade ago.
Killen's wetland, which had been drained and farmed, is among 230,000 acres (359 square miles) enrolled in the state Reinvest in Minnesota (RIM) Reserve program since it was launched 25 years ago in 1986. The program, acclaimed by conservation groups as a godsend, pays landowners to take marginal cropland out of production and restore wetlands and grasslands -- prime wildlife habitat.
The goal is less erosion, cleaner water and more fish and wildlife habitat. In the Killen's case, his 120-acre parcel of restored wetlands and grasslands is used by waterfowl, pheasants, deer and other wildlife.
Three days before the duck opener, 100 conservation leaders representing virtually every conservation group in the state gathered atop a knoll on Killen's property to celebrate the 25th anniversary of RIM.