On a warm day in late May, sunbeams peek through a thick canopy of aspen, oak, and black cherry near Rochester, Minnesota. Here and there, these natural spotlights fall on Carrol Henderson, clad in khaki cargo pants, plaid button-up, and baseball cap, a camera slung around his neck as usual. Through thin-rimmed glasses and binoculars, his blue eyes scan the high branches for the delicate nests of Great Blue Herons.
After a decades-long career in conservation, today Henderson is a 鈥淩ookie鈥 again. That鈥檚 what a group of Rochester homeowners and concerned citizens have dubbed themselves in honor of the unique heron rookery they鈥檙e working to save from development. The species typically nests in wet areas like riverbanks and lakeshores, but this roughly 40-nest clan has made a home in the relatively dry woods along diminutive Cascade Creek. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a colony that has achieved a sense of adaptation to the upland forest that no other colony in Minnesota has,鈥 Henderson says.
Walking quietly through the woods, Henderson and Leal Segura, a leader of the effort, note that many of the trees housing nests have been marked with orange blazes. This is where developers plan to build a winding road through the colony, which has been here for more than three decades. The road will lead toward 10 single-family homes planned for a 30-acre portion of the forest. While the project itself still needs permits, there鈥檚 little stopping the landowner from cutting down the trees. The federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act protects the birds during their nesting season, but after that they鈥檙e out of luck. Activists worry that as soon as the last of this year鈥檚 young fledge鈥攚hich should happen by the end of August at the latest鈥攃hainsaws will wipe out the rookery.
Henderson lives about an hour and a half away, near Minneapolis, but has been intimately involved with the effort since first hearing about it this spring. He on the birds鈥 behalf at local meetings and helped to brainstorm a multi-pronged approach to save the rookery. Minnesota鈥檚 Great Blue Heron numbers have been in steady decline for several decades. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just really unfortunate to see there are some people so profit-driven,鈥 he whispers to Segura so as to not disturb the birds. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 want anything to stand in their way.鈥
This is about as close to cynicism as the fervently optimistic Henderson gets. In a moment, he鈥檚 back to his signature disposition. 鈥淚n all the years that I鈥檝e worked with these different projects, I鈥檝e never been involved with one that ended up in the destruction of the colony,鈥 he says of previous efforts to save colonies during his career as a conservationist, his lithe gait through the dense woods belying his 75 years. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to ruin my record!鈥
Henderson鈥檚 record is long and impressive by any measure. Before his retirement in 2018, he spent 44 years at the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, most of it as director of the department鈥檚 Nongame Wildlife Program since its inception in 1977. Combining broad scientific know-how, media savvy, and an empathetic grasp of human behavior, Henderson has been able to make wildlife allies out of almost anyone. He grew the non-game office from a one-man show with a meager $25,000 annual budget (which included his salary) to an established program that today boasts an annual budget of nearly $3 million and protects thousands of species. Along the way he became widely regarded as a true giant of conservation.
鈥淗e was a spark in a state that has almost boundless good will for the environment and wildlife, but that good will needs to be organized, codified, and energized,鈥 says Dennis Anderson, who has covered Henderson鈥檚 work extensively as outdoor columnist for the Minneapolis and St. Paul Star Tribune. 鈥淗e鈥檚 done that 100 times over.鈥 Henderson鈥檚 legacy will be a Minnesota that鈥檚 better for all wildlife, from leopard frogs to river otters, Anderson says. 鈥淣o one was really speaking for them before.鈥
But just because Henderson is retired doesn鈥檛 mean that legacy is cemented. If anything, he is more active than ever. 鈥淚t鈥檚 more intriguing and challenging,鈥 he says, 鈥渘ow that I can say exactly what I think.鈥
H
enderson owes his love of wildlife in large part to his upbringing on a farm in central Iowa. 鈥淚 was always finding bird nests,鈥 he says. He became obsessed, 鈥渢o the point that when my parents or grandparents gave me little bird books, I would just literally wear the covers off.鈥
He left the farm to go to college at nearby Iowa State University where he majored in zoology and minored in botany and physics. At the suggestion of a professor, he applied to graduate school at the University of Georgia to study ecology and wildlife management. 鈥淚 grew up mostly not traveling more than 25 miles from home,鈥 Henderson says. 鈥淚 thought it would probably do me good to go to Georgia and get a little broader perspective on the world.鈥
Georgia was where he took the classes in journalism, public speaking, and media relations that he largely credits for the success of his conservation work decades later. He also accepted a professor鈥檚 offer to study land use and agriculture in Costa Rica, where with a simple bailamos鈥攍et鈥檚 dance鈥攈e met a local who later became his wife, Ethelle. They鈥檝e been married for 51 years.
The duo moved to Minnesota in 1974 for Henderson鈥檚 original role with the DNR, assistant manager at the Lac qui Parle Wildlife Management Area. Three years later, the department created a program to protect non-game wildlife鈥攖he species that aren鈥檛 pursued by hunters and anglers and tend to get overlooked when conservation funding gets divvied up. Henderson was hired as the first and, until his retirement, only person to lead it. His visionary ambitions for the program quickly outgrew its meager funding.
The program鈥檚 prospects brightened in 1980, when the Legislature created a line on Minnesota tax forms, now known as the allowing residents to donate a portion of their refund to non-game conservation. 鈥淥ur budget went from about $25,000 per year up to about $500,000 per year,鈥 Henderson says. Since 1981, the checkoff has raised more than $30 million to protect at-risk wildlife.
Suddenly the program, still so new that it had no overarching game plan, was flush with cash. Henderson鈥檚 creativity and tenacity were unleashed. 鈥淗e almost literally built the Minnesota DNR non-game program from scratch. It was his vision,鈥 Anderson says 鈥淗e thought in terms of ecology and the health of the landscape, and especially in terms of what is not often practiced diligently: the human dimension part of it.鈥
The first species Henderson focused on recovering was the Peregrine Falcon, whose populations had been plummeting across the U.S. due to a range of human factors, including the introduction of the toxic pesticide DDT in the 鈥50s and 鈥60s.
In 1981, Henderson launched a partnership with the University of Minnesota Raptor Center and several conservation organizations to return the birds to the state. They worked with more than 40 breeders around the U.S. and Canada to purchase young falcons, the first five of which were released in 1982, followed by three dozen more over the next four years. In 1987, a wild Peregrine fledged in Minnesota for the first time since the 鈥60s. Today the state enjoys a self-sustaining population that produces each year.
Henderson found similar success in efforts to restore other wildlife species including Bald Eagles, Eastern Bluebirds, and river otters. But it was his work to bring back Trumpeter Swans that meant the most to him.
Long hunted for their pelts, meat, and feathers, just 69 Trumpeter Swans remained in the continental U.S. by 1932, mostly in Montana. Henderson teamed up with a University of Minnesota ornithologist to publish a 1982 proposal for restoring the species.
Because Minnesota was the first state to tackle a major Trumpeter restoration project, Henderson and his collaborators were charting unknown territory. They had to work out how to collect, move, and hatch the eggs, and then how to care for the young chicks before their release. The system they came up with involved gathering eggs from Alaska, transporting them in specialized suitcases warmed with water bottles鈥攖hey periodically refilled the bottles with hot water from the airplane鈥檚 coffee pot鈥攁nd eventually releasing cygnets into the wild under careful supervision.
Drawing on his graduate coursework in journalism, Henderson convinced ABC News to cover the release of 40 swans in 1988. In April of that year, a news crew traveled from New York to a remote lake on the Minnesota reservation of the White Earth Band of Ojibwe. An estimated 40 million people watched the segment when it aired the following month.
From 1987 to 1994, Henderson oversaw the reintroduction of 217 swans. 鈥淲ithout his ingenuity and bravery, Trumpeter Swans probably still wouldn鈥檛 exist in Minnesota,鈥 says Lori Naumann, a spokeswoman for the non-game program who worked in the DNR cafeteria until Henderson hired her in an administrative position in 1989. Today, Minnesota鈥檚 population tops 30,000.
One January day a decade after the start of the project, Henderson was perched along the banks of the Mississippi River 40 miles northwest of Minneapolis, scoping out a flock of Trumpeters. Soon one of the swans began to swim towards him. Hoping to put the bird at ease, 鈥淚 just started a little aimless talk鈥攖he weather, whatever,鈥 he says. 鈥淗e was so close. He stepped up out of the water and I could see his leg band鈥濃攏umber 619-71888. 鈥淚 got back to the office, looked up the band number, and it turns out I actually collected that swan as an egg in Alaska in 1988,鈥 Henderson says. He had released the swan seven years earlier, over 100 miles away.
N
ow that Henderson is retired, nobody would blame him if he took things easy. He is a serious birder with a life list of around 3,000 species, and he鈥檚 certainly earned the right to enjoy his hobbies. But conservation has never been just a job for Henderson, and there鈥檚 still so much to do, from new writing projects to in the state鈥檚 northern bogs and boreal forest. A top priority, though, is protecting loons and other birds from lead poisoning.
Shortly before he left the DNR, Henderson concluded that showed how the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill harmed Common Loons and American White Pelicans that overwinter on the Gulf of Mexico and breed in Minnesota. His findings helped to secure the state for loon protection from the federal government鈥檚 spill settlement with BP. Officials earmarked $1.2 million of it to encourage anglers to switch from lead fishing tackle to nontoxic alternatives. Loons often ingest lead sinkers while feeding, and the resulting poisoning is responsible for around 14 percent of loon deaths in Minnesota鈥攁s many as 200 birds per year.
The effort is only Henderson鈥檚 most recent endeavor to prevent lead poisoning of birds. Some of his earliest fieldwork convinced the state to ban lead ammunition for waterfowl hunting in 1987. The federal government followed suit a few years later with a similar nationwide ban that by one estimate saves the lives of around per year. In retirement, Henderson has set his sights on eliminating lead ammunition in deer hunting, which kills eagles and other birds that eat bullet fragments while feeding on carrion.
Most immediately, though, he鈥檚 focused on saving the Rochester rookery. Segura called him for advice out of the blue in March when she, her husband, and their neighbors first became aware in the woods where they and the Great Blue Herons live. For Segura, the fight is personal: She still lives in the same house where she grew up alongside the colony and became attached to the gangly birds. 鈥淏ut I never realized the qualities that made [the colony] so unique for Minnesota before learning specifics from you,鈥 Segura says to Henderson, who is seated across from her, sipping black coffee.
At Segura鈥檚 kitchen table, the duo brainstorms various ways to save the colony鈥攎aybe the Rookies could buy the land where the nests are, or form a nonprofit to protect it. 鈥淲e need to cast a wide net now,鈥 Henderson says. 鈥淚t could be a classroom education site. Maybe Mayo Clinic,鈥 which is based in Rochester, 鈥渨ould be able to sponsor a webcam or something to give people the chance to see what鈥檚 happening.鈥
Recent weeks have had the Rookies on a see-saw of wins and setbacks. In May, the Olmsted County Commission made the property eligible for development by changing its zoning. But in late June, the group learned that the DNR鈥檚 Natural Heritage Advisory Committee voted to consider the site for protection as a designated Scientific and Natural Area, an idea Henderson has championed. Then, on June 29, a that Segura and company filed to halt work there.
Now it鈥檚 a race to save the rookery before its last chicks fledge and its federal protection runs out. Henderson remains undaunted by the ticking clock. He鈥檒l just keep doing what he鈥檚 done all his life: working hard, following his instincts, always looking for the next opportunity to do some good. It鈥檚 a straightforward approach, but it鈥檚 carried him this far.
鈥淚 get involved with something and then it鈥檚 like I just have to channel all my energies into that one cause to keep from getting distracted, to see things through,鈥 Henderson says. 鈥淭his is the kind of stuff that keeps a person young.鈥