Rebecca Reifler and her dog, Chloe, bounded down the trail to Lake Wilmes in Woodbury, where a man-made stream meanders. It's among more than 125 miles of trails in Woodbury -- and where Reifler, 57, loves to bring her family and friends when they visit.
That's what she told Dick Riemenschneider on a warm, windy morning last week as he toured one of the many park and public works projects he's worked on for the city. It was his final week on the job after four decades of service.
They met by happenstance, and Reifler told him that Woodbury's parks and open spaces are "spectacular." It was one of many thank-yous that Riemenschneider, 65, garnered last week for his work as public works superintendent for the past six years and, before that, as a parks worker and supervisor for 34 years.
He helped plan and build dozens of parks during the city's rapid growth. His many achievements include helping to build and maintain three water towers, a golf course and streets that grew in number from 42 to about 250.
He's well-known locally for the many projects he's been part of, and throughout the Twin Cities and beyond for his service on numerous committees and commissions -- and for his singing in barbershop quartets and choruses.
Still, he likes to say that public works employees "lead a different life," where obscurity can be good.
"When you're in public works, you want to be appreciated but not noticed, because when you do [get noticed], it's maybe that you've turned on a faucet and nothing came out, or that you couldn't get to church because the streets weren't plowed," he said with the little chuckle that's long endeared him to other city workers.
Riemenschneider's story is one as well of the graceful blossoming of a rural township with plenty of corn fields but no stoplights into one of the state's most progressive suburbs, with a tenfold population explosion during his tenure, to about 63,000 residents today.