WASHTENAW COUNTY CHAPTER # 151 HISTORY

Back in the winter of 1986 a news article was published in the Ann Arbor News by a concerned sportsman. He was hoping to find fellow sportsmen with an interest in doing something for the pheasants. Several others with the same concern read the article and decided to meet with Rick Young, who at the time was the regional biologist with Pheasants Forever.

The organizational meeting was held in May of 1987 at the Washtenaw Sportsman Club located on Ellis Road near Ypsilanti. Rick Young went over the process of starting a chapter and away we went.

Some of the original members were Hugh Montgomery, Lany Beckington, Steve Cummings, Chester Javis, Bob Gee, Loren Shook, Dave McPike, Roy Fehrle, Bob Ganzhorn, Larry Paquin, Dan Hornback, Keith Worrell and Steve Schneider.

The first elected officers were: Steve Schneider, President; Hugh Montgomery, VP; Chester Jarvis, Secretary; and Bob Gee, Treasurer.

One of the requirements was to hold a fundraising banquet each year to earn dollars for the local chapter. We scheduled the first banquet for September 16, 1987.

Of course the first banquet was the most memorable. We had 150 attendees that night and raised about $8,000. What a great memory and what support from local sportsmen and sportswomen.

But, we were truly infants in the habitat world. One of the first projects we undertook was to put out small corn bins in areas where pheasants were wintering in hopes of helping them through the snow covered months. The next spring we started planting food plots with the help, equipment and know how of Lany Beckington and Loren Shook. They became living legends for all the hard work and late nights they put into the projects. Many a night they would be out there until midnight: plowing, disking or planting.

Banquets came and went. We got pretty good at raising money and soon we were raising $20,000 to $25,000 per year. Our donors and banquet attendees were our greatest assets as they were instrumental in our fundraising. The more we made - the more we spent. It was on good things like food-plot seed - which we gave away to local landowners to plant. We also purchased several pieces of equipment over the years for planting food plots and drilling native prairie grass.

After several years, a new member came into the group. He worked at the U of M as a grant writer. After a few meetings and getting to know the group, he started talking about something strange...prairie grass and switch grass. At the time we thought Don Wieland was a little off his rocker. What would a pheasant want or need switch grass for? Little did we know but Don was about ten years ahead of the rest of us. Soon after Don was done educating us, we discovered that native prairie grass stands were one of the best habitats for pheasants that there would ever be.

With Don leading the way, we took off and got into the prairie establishment business. We even bought an eight foot wide native grass drill especially made for planting those fluffy grasses and flower seeds. Yes flowers! Who would have thought a bunch of guys would be planting flowers (forbs for the macho guys) and finding out that these forbs attracted bugs that pheasant chicks rely on for food during the first several weeks of their life.

As our Chapter matured, it became apparent that we would not be able to increase pheasant populations back to the levels they were in the 50's and 60's. What we did discover was that in addition to planting food plots each year and establishing native prairie grass stands, we needed to educate youth.

With this in mind, and with the help of the National Pheasants Forever office and the Michigan State Council of Pheasants Forever, we became involved with the Leopold Education Project (LEP). This project is designed to teach teachers and supply them with guidelines - so they can teach land-ethic based courses in the schools. The LEP curriculum is correlated with the MEAP testing system which is in use in Michigan schools. This allows teachers to have new content to teach land ethics and still fulfill teaching goals and requirements in areas like math, science and English. Over the years we have sponsored over 50 teachers for this education of our youth.

In addition to LEP education, we also began our annual mentor hunts in 2000. These hunts sponsor 30 youth on a local Washtenaw County farm each September. Each youth hunter and parent is assigned to a group of four to five hunters. They are then guided through fields where a dog handler assists them in finding a bird and making a safe shot. Getting the bird is all up to them and their hand / eye coordination. Some are successful and some are not; but all have a great time and learn how to hunt safely.

Many things have changed since our first meeting in 1987, but the goal is still the same...

Establish Habitat for Pheasants!


PF HISTORY

Pheasants Forever was co-founded in 1982 by co-workers at the St. Paul Pioneer Press and Dispatch, outdoor editor Dennis Anderson and national advertising director Jeff Finden. Both recognized a need for habitat restoration and preservation to ensure the future of pheasants and other wildlife. hunter in the distance

PF's first publication entitled "Rooster Tales," published in February 1983. This became the forerunner of today's Pheasants Forever Journal of Upland Conservation. The fledgling PF held its first banquet on April 15, 1983, drawing 800 people at the inaugural banquet. In January 2007, PF's third-ever National Pheasant Fest in Des Moines, Iowa, became the largest event in PF history, drawing over 24,500 attendees over a three-day span.

Twenty-five years after its inception, Pheasants Forever has become a grassroots, nationwide upland conservation movement - a national conservation powerhouse. The organization has grown to 110,000 members with over 600 chapters across the U.S. and Canada. Nationwide, Pheasants Forever has spent $260 million on program expenditures, which have helped fund 347,000 habitat projects affecting 4.4 million acres across North America. Along the way, PF has continued to employ the same unique organizational model of empowering local chapters to determine how 100 percent of their locally-raised conservation funds are spent. This local control allows chapters to see the fruits of their chapter efforts in their own communities.

Pheasants Forever will celebrate its 25th anniversary in January 18,19 & 20, 2008 at National Pheasant Fest at the RiverCentre in St. Paul.