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Celebrating 30 years of Pheasants Forever — with concerns ahead

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(MCT) — MINNEAPOLIS — Doug Lovander is on his ninth hunting dog since 1982, the year Pheasants Forever was founded in St. Paul. He can name them, too: “Boomer. Spanky. Patch. Big Sam. Magnum. Zach. Joe. Buster. Little Sam.”

Lovander, 60, of Willmar, Minn., was one of many important people involved in the organization’s startup, helping the group to transition from an idea to reality.

Lovander founded the group’s first chapter outside the Twin Cities and its second overall, in Kandiyohi County.

This weekend, along with some 30,000 other Pheasants Forever members and prospective members from throughout the country, Lovander will be in town to help celebrate the group’s 30th anniversary at its National Pheasant Fest and Quail Classic, slated for noon Friday through Sunday at the Minneapolis Convention Center.

A sports show unto itself, with more than 300 exhibitors and seminars on subjects as diverse as game cooking and dog training, Pheasant Fest is emblematic of Pheasants Forever’s evolution from state bird club to regional organization to important national conservation player.

High-profile keynote speakers at banquets Friday and Saturday nights make the point. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe will speak at the former, USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack the latter.

Statistics also help tell the Pheasants Forever story.

With a $58 million budget and an audited program efficiency of 91 percent, the group completed nearly 300,000 acres of habitat projects last year, while purchasing nearly 8,000 more acres for conservation.

Losing a land battle

Yet Pheasants Forever today faces headwinds as stiff as any since its incorporation on Aug. 5, 1982.

Example: Travel anywhere in rural Minnesota, Iowa, North Dakota or South Dakota, and where once even five years ago there was wildlife habitat, now there likely are corn and soybeans.

Driven by record high commodity prices that in turn are buoyed by government-subsidized ethanol production, farmers have fled the federal Conservation Reserve Program as if it were a plague, placing even marginally tillable acres under the plow.

Were it only pheasants at stake, or quail, prairie chickens, sharp-tailed grouse or ducks, hunters could rightly be accused of wanting taxpayers to fund, through farmland set-aside programs, their bird-shooting interests.

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