Cass County Chapter - Izaak Walton League of America

Cass County Chapter - Izaak Walton League of America Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Cass County Chapter - Izaak Walton League of America, Environmental conservation organisation, 4181 Tall Timber Trail NW, Hackensack, MN.

The Cass County Chapter of the Izaak Walton League of America promotes an awareness and understanding of environmental and conservation issues affecting the citizens of Cass County and the surrounding lake areas

Learning about pollinators….
12/10/2022

Learning about pollinators….

Upcoming Pollinator Webinar Series January 31, February 1 & 2, 2023

A tour of the energy conservation efforts at Deep Portage Center was hosted by Norm Moody, Cass County IZKES.
10/15/2022

A tour of the energy conservation efforts at Deep Portage Center was hosted by Norm Moody, Cass County IZKES.

Climate Change Forum PanelistsMark Gossman, Cass County Land CommissionerKeith Karnes, DRM Forestry Director, Leech Lake...
10/15/2022

Climate Change Forum Panelists

Mark Gossman, Cass County Land Commissioner

Keith Karnes, DRM Forestry Director, Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe

Meredith Cornett, Ph. D. , Climate Change Director for MN, ND, and SD The Nature Conservancy

Local groups in support of climate change education hosted table booths at the Forum.
10/15/2022

Local groups in support of climate change education hosted table booths at the Forum.

Lynne Harrington, Deep Portage Center Foundation President, welcomed guests to Deep Portage and the Climate Change Forum
10/15/2022

Lynne Harrington, Deep Portage Center Foundation President, welcomed guests to Deep Portage and the Climate Change Forum

Cass County IKES and Deep Portage Center hosted a well attended Climate Change Forum Saturday, October 8, 2022 at the De...
10/15/2022

Cass County IKES and Deep Portage Center hosted a well attended Climate Change Forum Saturday, October 8, 2022 at the Deep Portage Center. Over 80 participants listened to a keynote speaker and 3 panelists, interacted with 6 different organizations at table booths and could choose to tour the Deep Portage Center energy conservation efforts.

Cass County IKES member, Jack Fitzgerald, welcomed everyone

09/20/2022

NEW VISION STATEMENT

Izaak Walton League Vision for a Second Century of Conservation

Not long ago, America’s environmental problems were stark. Industrial pollution and soil erosion threatened to destroy many of our nation’s waterways. Wetlands were being drained at an alarming rate. And the country’s forests and wilderness areas were disappearing.

Aware that action was necessary to solve these problems, concerned sportsmen and women created the Izaak Walton League of America in 1922 to combat water pollution and protect the country’s woods and wildlife. The League’s founders rallied around the cause of conservation, not only because it was inherently important but because the traditions they loved – fishing, hunting and other outdoor recreation – were in jeopardy.

As the League embarks on its second century, our members – and every American – can take pride in very real progress over the past 100 years to clean up our air and water, restore fish and wildlife and conserve national parks and other public lands that are the envy of the world.

However, our environmental problems have not been solved – they have evolved.

Today, threats to America’s soil, air, woods, waters and wildlife are less obvious than in the past – but not less dangerous.

Polluted runoff from farm fields, parking lots, industrial sites and back yards flows unchecked and untreated into our streams and rivers, carrying animal waste, bacteria and cancer-causing chemicals through our communities. The overarching goals of the Clean Water Act – water safe for drinking, fishing and swimming – seem simple, but they continue to elude the nation.

Draining wetlands – one of the issues that so concerned League founders – has accelerated again. Today, priceless topsoil in our heartland is eroding away at a rate 10 times faster than it can be replaced.

Popular game species, including deer, turkey and some waterfowl, are thriving – thanks in no small part to the hard work of and funding from hunters, anglers and shooting sports enthusiasts. However, other wildlife species – from backyard birds to bees and many cold-water fish – have been decimated or face an uncertain future.

And today we face challenges that dwarf those early League leaders confronted a century ago. No challenge is greater than climate change. The accelerating rise in global temperatures threatens natural resources, public health, our economy and way of life unlike any previous conservation problem. We see the consequences of a warming planet in our communities and in the wild places that make outdoor America so special. The world’s scientists agree urgent action is needed to reduce emission of greenhouse gases and to store more carbon from the atmosphere in our soil, wetlands and forests.

The threats to America’s lands, waters and wildlife also jeopardize outdoor recreation across the country. The outdoor recreation activities that League members and tens of millions of Americans enjoy – from hiking, camping and boating to fishing and hunting – depend on healthy natural resources. If these outdoor experiences are diminished by pollution and resource loss, it will not only affect the people who are active today but also make it harder to get future generations outdoors.

THE FUTURE

As the Izaak Walton League embarks on its second century of leadership on conservation and outdoor recreation, we reaffirm and renew our commitment to defend outdoor America. We are realistic about the challenges ahead and unwavering in our resolve to tackle them head on.

A century ago, League founders confronted an alarming array of threats by declaring it was “Time to Call a Halt.” Then, they got to work building an organization and a grassroots movement to ensure future generations would benefit from a healthy environment.

Today, League members and millions of Americans who share our goals have the opportunity to secure the future we all want. A future where:

Every community enjoys clean air, water and other healthy natural resources.

We are winning the fight against climate change with clean energy, healthy soil, protected landscapes and abundant wetlands, forests and grasslands.

Americans rediscover their love for nature beginning in their local communities.

The conservation movement reflects the diversity of America – where conservation becomes part of everyday life for everyone.

Traditions of hunting, fishing and target shooting endure through growing participation by people of all backgrounds.
By building on our strengths from local community action to national policy advocacy, the League can make this vision of the future a reality.

Achieving our vision for conservation and outdoor recreation in America will take hard work and time.

With the long-term outcomes firmly in sight, the League, our members, volunteers and partners will use the following Second Century Action Plan to drive our collective efforts over the next five years.

Building on Our Strengths: Community-based Conservation and Volunteer Science
In our second century, the Izaak Walton League of America will continue to draw upon the power of people united by purpose. The belief that individuals play a large role in conservation is the foundation of our Action Plan. Whether in volunteer science, policy advocacy or engaging people in outdoor recreation, individuals make all the difference.

Moreover, the League amplifies the impact of every individual by fostering connections between many people across the country. To help make conservation a part of everyday life, the League will engage more Americans to tackle the serious challenges ahead.

Leveraging Volunteer Science
Using technology and a crowd-sourced model, the League will mobilize more people to test for pollution in local waters. Over the next five years, we will:

Expand Salt Watch to include at least 5,500 volunteers in 300 communities submitting 35,000 chloride test results annually.

Implement new crowd-sourced water quality campaigns focused on the most dangerous and persistent water pollutants, beginning with Nitrate Watch.

Grow Nitrate Watch to engage 3,000 volunteers and collect more than 10,000 nitrate test results annually.

Proactively facilitate volunteer monitoring on a regional scale, beginning in the Mid-Atlantic and upper Midwest, with a priority on watersheds where an insufficient amount of data currently exists to accurately assess water quality.
Turning Data into Action
Testing for water pollution is a means to an end. Today, League volunteers are turning the data they collect into action to improve water quality in their communities. Those actions range from requesting local park authorities stop overusing harmful pesticides to testifying in front of city councils urging limits on road salt application.

But the League can, and must, do more to leverage test results from volunteers to reduce pollution at its source, clean up degraded waters and mobilize a new generation of clean water advocates. Over the next five years, we will:

Transform the Clean Water Hub website into the go-to resource for timely information about water quality at the community level by:

providing easy-to-understand maps and reports showcasing water quality and sharing this information with the public via social media and outreach campaigns; 50 percent of organizations submitting data to the Hub will promote the Hub as a public education resource locally

increasing the number of sites with water quality test results from 5,000 to 18,000

growing the base of volunteers submitting test results from 100 to 300 groups and as many as 10,000 individual volunteers

augmenting advocacy resources, training and tools to facilitate public communication with policymakers about water quality issues in local communities
Stand up robust STEM education (emphasizing science, technology, engineering and math) programs using Save Our Streams biological and chemical water quality monitoring in at least 10 high schools in the Mid-Atlantic and Midwest. These become self-sustaining programs educating hundreds of future scientists, teachers and clean water advocates annually.

Facilitate volunteers’ engagement with private companies that apply salt and other chemical deicers to request these companies reduce chemical use by at least 25 percent.

Expand advocacy among Salt Watch volunteers so that at least 30 percent of all volunteers submitting test results take at least one other action to reduce salt use, including contacting their local government when they observe excessive road salt use.
Driving Change from the Bottom Up
To change policies, behavior and land uses that contribute to pollution, the League will help local groups develop and execute strategies to solve environmental challenges. Over the next five years, we will:

Support development and implementation of grassroots advocacy campaigns in 10 to 15 communities to reduce use of road salt and chemical deicers by at least 25 percent across the entire community.

Work with five states to create and implement “smart salt” applicator training for state and local departments of public works and companies that perform most of the winter maintenance for large private property owners.

Actively engage historically underserved communities, including communities of color, low-income neighborhoods and marginalized populations, in advocacy campaigns to ensure every American benefits from a healthy environment.
Building on Our Strengths: Advocacy for Common-Sense Conservation
Saving outdoor America requires sound public policy to protect clean water and air, fish and wildlife and other natural resources for future generations. The genuine progress improving our environment over the past 100 years is due, in part, to the adoption of public policies advanced by the Izaak Walton League and other organizations. As we look to the future, policy advocacy will be one of the ways the League achieves our broader mission.

A Comprehensive Approach to Conservation
Climate change, polluted runoff and the spread of invasive plants and animals are not localized problems – they affect entire landscapes. The League will shape national and regional policies to protect and restore natural resources and safeguard public health. Over the next five years, we will:

Safeguard drinking water supplies and wildlife habitat by pressing Congress to amend the Clean Water Act to reaffirm it protects all natural streams and wetlands in the United States.

Expand conservation and restoration efforts to priority regions, including the Mississippi, Ohio and Missouri River basins, modeled after successful efforts in the Great Lakes and Chesapeake Bay.

Increase advocacy for public policies and funding to address the urgency of the climate crisis, with priorities focused on:

expanding large-scale storage capacity for electricity generated by solar, wind and other renewable resources

modernizing the electricity grid

facilitating additional renewable energy generation following thorough environmental review

improving energy efficiency throughout the economy, especially in transportation, buildings and manufacturing and opposing efforts to reduce current efficiency standards

reducing emission of greenhouse gases from electricity generation, transportation and fossil fuel production

conserving and restoring natural resources, especially wetlands, native grasslands and healthy soils that maximize carbon capture and storage

Transforming Agriculture
America’s farms feed the nation, but agriculture is also the largest source of polluted runoff. Meanwhile, declining soil health jeopardizes our food supply and limits our ability to remove carbon from the atmosphere. We can make real progress to solve these problems by rapidly expanding conservation on the ground. Over the next five years, we will:

Advocate to:

double conservation funding to $10 billion annually in the 2023 Farm Bill, and focus the additional funding to quickly scale up proven, measurable conservation practices that improve soil health, reduce water pollution and store more carbon in the soil, wetlands and native grasslands

expand use of soil health practices, including planting cover crops and reducing or eliminating tillage, on America’s farms, ranches and other working lands with a goal of having these practices on tens of millions of acres in 10 years

reduce water pollution and improve fish and wildlife habitat by adding buffer strips along streams and rivers, ultimately reaching 2 million acres in 10 years

protect five million acres of grasslands to build strong carbon storage capabilities and provide crucial habitat for wildlife while ensuring adequate resources to meet the grazing needs of America’s ranchers

accelerate the transition to regenerative agriculture by passing targeted federal legislation, including the League’s Good Farmer Discount for crop insurance and state and tribal soil health grants
Press the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to effectively enforce longstanding policies that prohibit farmers from receiving subsidized crop insurance and other taxpayer-funded benefits if they drain wetlands or fail to take common-sense steps to reduce soil erosion.

Partner with USDA agencies and state and county soil and water conservation districts to proactively inform producers about how to implement conservation practices on a much larger geographic scale and accelerated timetable.

Work with League chapters to encourage farmers and farmland owners to expand implementation of conservation practices that improve soil health, reduce polluted runoff and store carbon.

Collaborate with League divisions to pass legislation in five states that prioritizes and funds improving soil health and expanding conservation on working lands.

Defending a Century of Progress
Public policy, grassroots advocacy and funding from hunters, anglers and shooting sports enthusiasts have all contributed to the very real progress over the past 100 years to clean up our air and water, restore fish and wildlife and conserve public lands. Yet, these gains are not guaranteed in perpetuity – progress can be slowed, reversed or repealed altogether by policymakers. Efforts to roll back critical protections and principles are not theoretical – they are very real.

Building on this progress starts with ensuring we don’t go backwards. With our focus on a better future, the League will defend bedrock principles and policies that protect public health and conserve natural resources for all Americans.

These principles include:

Managing natural resources based on best available science

Ensuring robust public participation in decision-making

Reducing pollution at the source
Building on Our Strengths: Connecting People to the Outdoors
The League is uniquely positioned to reconnect Americans to the natural world and foster the next generation of conservationists, hunters and anglers.

Gateway to the Outdoors
In an increasingly virtual world, Americans are more disconnected than ever from the outdoors and nature. Through community outreach, public events like fishing derbies and local conservation projects, more than 200 League chapters will connect people to nature and grow participation in outdoor recreation. Just as importantly, the League will build on 100 years of advocacy for policies and investment to protect public lands and expand access to them for all Americans. Over the next five years, we will:

Help chapters to establish or enhance at least one partnership locally that facilitates connections to the outdoors especially for families, students or others who do not have ready access to the outdoors.

Support chapters with shooting sports facilities in proactively expanding outreach to and engagement with audiences that do not have a family history of participation, including young adults and first-time fi****ms owners.

Expand access to public lands and waters for hunting, fishing, hiking and other outdoor recreation through advocacy that prioritizes, among other things:

adequate federal, state and local funding for essential infrastructure and visitor services

targeted annual investments from the Land and Water Conservation Fund focused on improving access to existing lands and waters and through new acquisition

digitizing all information currently held by federal land management agencies documenting easements and other access points to public lands
Conservation for Everyone
From tuning in to a webinar to joining a local clean-up, the League offers many ways to get involved in conservation. By helping people appreciate that their actions have meaningful impact, we will engage future volunteers, policy advocates and League members. Over the next five years, we will:

Double downloads of the Creek Critters mobile app as the first step for people to learn how pollution affects water quality in their communities.

Leverage virtual resources to more effectively inform audiences nationwide about how they can get involved in conserving natural resources.

Coordinate at least one event annually at every League chapter that engages members of the community in conservation locally.

Enhance grassroots impact by mobilizing thousands of volunteer scientists as advocates for a broader range of the League’s conservation policy priorities, including regenerative agriculture, public lands management and combatting climate change.

New book….
09/20/2022

New book….

09/20/2022

UPDATES FROM NATIONAL OFFICE

This Month's Highlight: Looking to the Future

The theme of our 100th anniversary convention – “Honoring Our Heritage, Embracing Our Future” – signaled the event’s role as a turning point within our centennial celebrations. As part of that pivot, League President Vicki Arnold introduced our vision for our second century, which focuses on engaging more Americans in community-based conservation and volunteer science, advocating for sound public policy to protect America's natural resources for future generations, and connecting people to the natural world.

The vision outlines challenges current and future generations will face, and it provides a road map for how the League can help meet them. Every member can help secure the future we all want. With the work ethic and can-do spirit that have always been characteristic of Ikes, we can turn our vision into reality on the American landscape, just as we did when the League first formed.

Also at the convention, our board of directors voted to adopt a new logo for the League. We'll continue to use our celebratory centennial logo for the rest of this year – then, beginning in January 2023, we'll transition to using the version in the image above.
The powerful visual representation of our mission makes it easier for people to quickly understand who we are. It shows the legacy we stand on and the future we are working to secure. It also includes space at the bottom of the green ring to add a chapter name. Watch for more information later this year as we transition from the temporary anniversary logo to the long-term version.

100th anniversary history book

THREE THINGS YOU CAN DO RIGHT NOW

Now available for advance purchase (delivery to begin in October): the special-edition book, Izaak Walton League of America: A Century of Conservation Leadership 1922-2022! This 250-plus-page softcover book is a look back at 100 years of League history in photographs. Garnered from a century of images in Outdoor America, the League’s archives and other sources, hundreds of photos not seen in decades come with captions highlighting historic people, places and events. Purchase your copy now! Visit our online store and click "Books and Literature" on the left or complete this printable order form.

Back-to-school season is upon us... did you know the Izaak Walton League offers a free online course in how to assess water quality? Try it any time. If you like it, join us for a field workshop to earn your certification.

We have a new Salt Watch Coordinator! Abby Hileman is a lifelong conservationist with a passion for connecting people to their communities and to nature. Abby is an avid gardener and can often be found outside with her deaf dog, Arthur. Please help Abby learn the ropes by asking her to send you a FREE Salt Watch kit. Your kit will still be good when road salt season rolls around, or you can use it right away to get a baseline reading.

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT

Other important Convention events included the election of new officers, the adoption of new policy resolutions, and the celebration of outstanding accomplishments by League chapters, members, volunteers and partners. (Plus, of course, the creation of a new iconic group shot, shown above.) Read a summary of key takeaways.

Earlier this summer, Howard Fox, host of the Outdoor Adventure series, talked to our Scott Kovarovics about the League's extraordinary history, the challenges we're tackling next, and how everyone can make a difference for conservation. Listen to the podcast.

In August, the League celebrated National Shooting Sports Month. With the help of a grant from the national office, our Mountaineer Chapter (West Virginia) hosted an event to introduce kids and adults to recreational shooting sports. Read about all the amazing things the chapter is doing.

Quick News

Look for the next Outdoor America arriving soon in your mailbox. In this issue: the connection between soil health and human health, how to use social media in conservation advocacy, and more updates from the 100th anniversary convention.

In August, the Missouri River Recovery Implementation Committee (MRRIC) submitted a recommendation to the Army Corps of Engineers on where to construct two new Interception Rearing Complexes. IRCs are habitat projects that create slow, shallow water areas in a river. Studies suggest that young pallid sturgeon, whose ancestors have been plying the Mighty Mo for millions of years, need these quiet refuges in order to survive their first twelve months. Our Paul Lepisto is the chair of MRRIC’s Fish work group.

INFORMATION ABOUT THE KEYNOTE SPEAKER AT CLIMATE CHANGE FORUM        Dr. Jessica Hellmann Is Keynote Speaker at Climate ...
09/12/2022

INFORMATION ABOUT THE KEYNOTE SPEAKER AT CLIMATE CHANGE FORUM

Dr. Jessica Hellmann Is Keynote Speaker at Climate Change Forum

Dr. Jessica Hellmann, recipient of numerous prestigious awards for her scholarship and leadership in understanding and confronting climate change, will give the keynote address at the climate change forum to be held at Deep Portage Learning Center east of Hackensack on Saturday, Oct. 8, 2022.
Dr Hellmann is the Russell M. and Elizabeth M. Bennett Chair in Excellence in the Department Ecology, Evolution and Behavior in the College of Biological Sciences at the University of Minnesota (Twin Cities); Director of the U of M’s Institute on the Environment; the Ecolab Chair in Environmental Leadership; and University Director of the recently established Midwest Climate Adaptation Science Center. Her research focuses, among other things, on global and local ecological changes associated with climate change, limiting green house gas emissions, and the importance of sensible adaptation to – living with - climate change. She pioneered work in new ways of managing our natural resources to conserve them for future generations. She is a much-in-demand adviser on climate change related issues for state and federal government agencies, non-profit organizations and for-profit corporations.
Entitled “The Challenge of Climate Change in Northern Minnesota”, the forum is a day-long event. It will include, in addition to Dr Hellmann’s address in the morning, an afternoon panel discussion with Dr. Meredith Cornett, The Nature Conservancy’s Climate Change Director (Duluth Office); Keith Karnes, Forest Manager, Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe; and Cass County Land Commissioner Mark Grossman. The day’s program will conclude with a guided tour of the many alternative energy installations on the Deep Portage Learning Center Campus.
The forum is sponsored by the Deep Portage Learning Center and the Cass County Chapter of the Izaak Walton League of America. Seating is limited. Pre-registration and payment of the $10 forum fee (which includes lunch) on or before Saturday, Oct. 1 is required. While pre-registration is still required, the fee is waived for anyone under 21 and current college students. Go to www.deep-portage.org/public-programs or call 218-682-2941 to find more information about the forum, register and pay the fee.

From guided natural history walks to renewable energy tours, Deep Portage offers fun and educational programming for public visitors. Check out our calendar below, and sign up for our mailing list to get updates on the latest events!

UPDATE INFORMATION       THE CHALLENGE OF CLIMATE CHANGE IN NORTHERN MINNESOTA                                 A Day-lon...
09/12/2022

UPDATE INFORMATION
THE CHALLENGE OF CLIMATE CHANGE IN NORTHERN MINNESOTA
A Day-long Forum with Expo
Saturday, Oct. 8, 2022

Deep Portage Learning Center
2197 Nature Center Drive NW, Hackensack

Doors open at 9:00 a.m.

Keynote Address in the morning by:
Dr. Jessica Hellmann, Institute on the Environment, Univ. MN

Panel Discussion in the afternoon with:
Dr. Meredith Cornett, The Nature Conservancy
Mark Gossman, Cass County Land Commissioner
Keith Karnes, Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe

Guided tour of extensive alternative energy installations on the Learning Center campus
Pre-registration and payment of $10 forum fee (lunch included) BY OCT. 1 REQUIRED
(Pre-registration required, but fee waved for those under 21 or current college students)
Go to www.deep-portage.org/public-programs or call 218-682-2325 for more information and to register and pay fee
JOIN US FOR AN INFORMATIVE AND THOUGHT-PROVOKING DAY!

From guided natural history walks to renewable energy tours, Deep Portage offers fun and educational programming for public visitors. Check out our calendar below, and sign up for our mailing list to get updates on the latest events!

An Overview of the Izaak Walton League of America and welcome to new summer campers to the Cass County IKES Chapter camp...
08/17/2022

An Overview of the Izaak Walton League of America and welcome to new summer campers to the Cass County IKES Chapter camp

A Very Brief History of the Izaak Walton League

In the years following the 1918 victory of the United States and allies in World War I, our country experienced many significant economic and social changes. Industry expanded rapidly, especially the mass production of all kinds of things in large factories. In addition, as farming became more mechanized and the need for manual farm labor decreased, the population began shifting from rural to urban areas where factory jobs could be found. As a result the populations of towns and cities grew quickly.

While these changes improved the standard of living of many, they were also accompanied by some significant problems. Among them was the enormous increase in both the amount and concentration of industrial waste – what was left over after the factories produced their products. Furthermore, as people crowded into cities to work in the factories, sewer systems concentrated their personal waste. The liquid and solid wastes from both of these sources were typically dumped into lakes, rivers, streams and wetlands, severely polluting these resources and depriving fish and other aquatic animals and plants of the conditions they require to live, let alone thrive and multiply. Smoke from the factories also contained poisonous gases and other substances that fouled the air and made it difficult for people and many other living things to breathe. Shallow waters and wetlands, which are the nurseries for many fish and other aquatic animals, were filled or drained to make room for houses and factories. Then too, wilderness areas were rapidly disappearing as huge tracts of forests were being cut to provide the wood for housing and stores and other structures demanded by the growing urbanization of America. As forests came down and farms grew larger and more mechanized, soil erosion increased dramatically, also helping to pollute lakes and rivers.

Finally, increasingly specialized agriculture relied more and more on artificial fertilizers, some of which found their way into the soil and streams, adding to the pollution of our land and waters.

In 1922 a group of 54 sportsmen, hunters and fishers mostly, met in Chicago - where the waters of the Chicago River were so polluted by industrial waste, human sewage and silt from soil erosion that virtually nothing could survive in it. They decided to form an organization that would be devoted to cleaning up and protecting lakes, rivers and streams, saving some of the remaining forests and other wilderness areas, cleaning up the air and reducing soil erosion.

They named their organization the Izaak Walton League of America. Members came to be called IKES. Izaak Walton was a 17th century English sportsman and conservationist. He was best known for his very popular book entitled The Compleat Angler. In this book he discussed, not just the many aspects of being a skillful fisher, but also the value of teaching others to fish, as well as the pleasure and spiritual satisfaction to be gained from being in nature. He emphasized the ways in which the quality of our day-to-day lives as humans depends on the quality of our natural resources – water, air, lands, forests and wildlife. He was a strong advocate for outdoor recreation of all types and its importance in living a healthful, happy and fulfilled life. He was among the first to advocate what we now call science-based wildlife management (through catch and size limits for fish, for example) in order to preserve the resource for the enjoyment of future generations.

The League’s first success was in Minnesota’s Superior National Forest, which had been set aside as a wilderness area by President Roosevelt in 1909. In 1923, some northern counties in the state proposed building roads into the portion of the forest between Lake Superior and the Canadian border. The U.S. Forest Service at first agreed with the proposal. But the newly formed Izaak Walton League knew that building roads into the forest ultimately meant the destruction of the forest wilderness. They organized to oppose the proposal. They argued their case forcefully and succeeded in persuading the Forest Service to abandon the road building project.

This victory led to others in Minnesota, including the establishment of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area and the Upper Mississippi National Wildlife and Fish Refuge, which provide habitat for many species of birds, fish, other animals and plants.
Local IKES, whose chapter is now called the Cass County Chapter, have been active since the earliest days of the organization, protecting and restoring fish and wildlife habitat and helping educate the public about threats to our natural resource heritage. Among their most recent and significant accomplishments is the central role they played in raising money for and persuading local and state legislators to create the Deep Portage Conservation Reserve and the Deep Portage Learning Center – the facilities and programs you will be experiencing as IKES campers at Deep Portage.

Today, there are about 40,000 members of the Izaak Walton League organized into about 200 community based chapters scattered throughout the United States. Minnesota is among the states with the highest number of chapters and members.
The League, its chapters and members are actively involved in helping resolve a wide variety of issues, from deterring the spread of invasive species through the dumping of foreign ship ballasts in our ports to reducing highly polluting fertilizer run-off from agricultural lands. All of these efforts are aimed at protecting and where necessary restoring the quality of our natural resources. It doesn’t matter where we live or what we do for a living or for fun; we depend on clean water, pure air, healthy forests, natural wilderness and productive lands that resist erosion. These resources need to be preserved, not only for our benefit, but also for the benefit of those that come after us.

We invite you to check out the Izaak Walton League’s web site (www.iwla.org - the source of much of the information on these pages) to learn more about the League, its chapters and its activities. To see some videos about the Izaak Walton League and Deep Portage go to youtube.com and search for the Izaak Walton League.

We hope you will learn from and enjoy your experiences at the Deep Portage Izaak Walton League Camp. The activities have been chosen to give you a close up look at some of our most precious natural resources and the role they play in all of our lives. We also hope that you and your family, if you are not already Izaak Walton League members, will consider joining us in the important work of protecting our natural resources by becoming members of a chapter of the League near where you live.

The Izaak Walton League member pledge:

To strive for the purity of water, the clarity of air, and the wise stewardship of the land and its resources; to know the beauty and understanding of nature and the value of wildlife, woodlands, and open space; to the preservation of this heritage and to our sharing in it. I pledge myself as a member of the Izaak Walton League of America.

BEST WISHES AND HAVE FUN THIS WEEK!

The Members of the Cass County Chapter of the Izaak Walton League of America (JDF 8/14/2022)

The Izaak Walton League is one of America’s oldest and most successful conservation organizations. We protect natural resources in communities across the country.

Address

4181 Tall Timber Trail NW
Hackensack, MN
56452

Telephone

+12186822941

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Cass County Chapter - Izaak Walton League of America posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to Cass County Chapter - Izaak Walton League of America:

Share