Good post, Manley. I think this also ties in nicely with Jim Williams' exhortations to buy duck stamps. As a duck hunter, I buy them anyway, but anyone buying them is helping to acquire, expand, improve and maintain habitat important to birds.
From: Ann and Manley Olson <[email protected]> Reply-To: [email protected] To: "Alt, Mark" <[email protected]> CC: [email protected], MOU Board <[email protected]>,mnbird <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [mou] MOU has leased land in the Sax Zim Bog Area Date: Thu, 02 Jun 2005 10:09:04 -0500 I applaud the action of the MOU to lease land in the Sax Zim Bog, thereby increasing the access for MOU members in this unique area of Minnesota. Given the propensity of land owners to increasingly espouse a "this land ain't your land, this land is my land" philosophy, we need to find ways to assure that we will be able to look for those birds that chose to frequent other than public lands. Working out lease arrangements not only helps provide this access but may also help to improve relations with local land owners. However we should also recognize that we need to be concerned with preserving habitat, even if it is not a place where we might actually go to seek birds. This I would hope that the MOU and its members would continue to support public acquisition of important habitat, even if it is not a place we are likely to visit. Not only do we need places where we personally expect to see birds,but we need to support the acquisition and preservation of wilderness for its own sake. It must be both/and not either/or. This is the vision of Thoreau (" In wildness is the preservation of the world"), John Muir and Aldo Leopold. In the concluding paragraphs of "A Sand County Almanac", Leopold passionately argues for the preservation of wilderness for its own sake, not just for the use of "trophy-recreationists" as well as trophy hunters. If we doubt that most of us birders are not in the trophy collection business, one needs only to review the data Randy Fredrickson compiled on the spending in pursuit of owls. For some of us the trophy was a photo, for others a tick on a list. After 45 years of marriage my wife is no longer surprised by a trip to Aitkin County to see owls but I think she was not quite prepared for at least 150 people from 9 states who came to our back yard seeking the Varied Thrush. So while I encourage the providing, either by lease or purchase, of places where we can bird freely, I also encourage us to put some of our resources into land acquisition, even if we may never bird there. Manley Olson Falcon Heights Alt, Mark wrote: >The MOU has taken a first step and become a leaseholder on a parcel of land in St Louis County, in the Sax Zim Bog area, less than a mile from Owl Avenue. We are leasing 79 acres from Potlatch Corporation for a year. It will be posted for no trespassing except with the permission of the leaseholder, which is the MOU, so anyone who is a MOU member is a leaseholder, so come on down! The MOU Board is doing this to take a first step towards setting aside areas here for recreational birding. The DNR and MN Audubon are strong supporters of this initiative. We hope it leads to other land being set aside, such as McDavitt for the woodpeckers, the Blue Spruce loop for Boreal specialties, and others. Perhaps it may lead to a birding trail. We are not certain of how to best use this plot, but we want it used, so I invite each of you to come visit and bird on it! I will keep a tally of species reported on it and make notes on our usages. > The legal description of the property is referencing the St Louis Plat book - it is the SW quarter of section 21 in T.54.N. - R.19W. For regular directions, drive North from Cloquet to Cotton on Hwy 53, then turn west on Hwy 52 (Arkola Rd), past CR 7 (about 6 miles), then continue west another 5.5 miles to Owl Avenue (Township rd 203). Turn south on TR 203 and head south. Continue about 2 miles through a gradual "S" turn, (where TR 203 turns into TR 202), then you come to an intersection with S. Overton Rd. (TR 980). Turn West on TR 980 and proceed 1.75 miles, from this point to where TR 980 makes a 90 degree turn to head north, you are driving along the southern border of our property. As you turn north the Township Rd number is now TR 230, and the name of the road is now Overton Rd. The first ½ mile as you head north on TR 230, the MOU property borders you on your right. There are boglands on the remote NE corner of the property, so we could get all types of northern specialties, potentially. > We are arranging to have a small parking area set up for 6 cars or > trucks in the area. We will be looking forward to hearing from all visitors to this little spot of woods up north; please let us know what is there! Good Birding! > > > >Mark Alt >President, >Minnesota Ornithologists Union >J. F. Bell Museum of Natural History >University of Minnesota >10 Church Street SE >Minneapolis, MN 55455-0104 >MOU.mn.org >[email protected] >Cell: 612-803-9085 > > > >_______________________________________________ >mou-net mailing list >[email protected] >http://cbs.umn.edu/mailman/listinfo/mou-net > > > _______________________________________________ mou-net mailing list [email protected] http://cbs.umn.edu/mailman/listinfo/mou-net

