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Conservationist helps wood duck population take flight

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“They love it, you can see it in their eyes,” he said. “You can talk to them about habitat, clean wetlands, what the ducks eat and why they want to nest here.”

His passion — some might call it an obsession — with wood ducks began as a youngster. He grew up in Minneapolis in a hunting family, and spent summers on Green Lake near New London, where his father grew up. His dad eventually bought 80 acres nearby “so the family would always have a place to hunt,” Strand said.

Later, Roger Strand added to the acreage and now lives there with his wife, Kay, still hunting waters that he first hunted in junior high. He erected his first wood duck box there in 1956.

“I thought we had to do something,” he said. “The newspapers talked about wood ducks coming back from the brink of extinction, and you could help them by putting up boxes.”

So he did, one after another. Ten years ago, the tally hit 100.

But over the years, Strand learned what worked and what didn’t. Wood duck boxes nailed to trees were death traps.

“I found a dead hen in a box, and a gray squirrel was still in there with its litter,” he said. “That taught me a lesson.”

He learned that legendary Illinois waterfowl biologist Frank Bellrose, a pioneer in waterfowl management, recommended metal guards to prevent predators such as raccoons, mink and squirrels from destroying eggs and ducks.

Placed on a post away from low-hanging branches and with a metal predator guard, the boxes offer wood ducks safe nesting.

Strand got religion, and now he spreads the gospel.

“For over 30 years since I started using predator guards, I’ve had no mammalian predation of wood ducks in a box,” he said.

And with the predator guards, the boxes can be placed just a few feet from the ground, making them safer to install and easier to check, clean and observe ducks and ducklings. Strand builds his own wood duck boxes from cedar, and his local Waterfowl Association chapter helps market the metal guards.

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