The Lore and Legends of Waterhen Lodge
by
Book Details
About the Book
Waterhen Lodge is a delightful shooting club located in Manitoba, Canada. It is situated on Long Island Bay of Lake Winnipegosis, which is, as the duck flies, one-hundred-seventy-five miles north/northwest of Winnipeg. Today the lodge can be reached by automobile after a two-hundred-mile drive, which takes about four hours. It has not always been this easy.
The club was formed in 1948 with ten members, all of whom were Americans. The membership has grown to a level of twenty-five today, including fourteen Canadians, ten Americans and one Puerto Rican. In all, seventy-four gentlemen have enjoyed membership. This list includes a rich diversity of corporate executives, military officers, family physicians and small businessmen. These members have invited some equally fascinating guests to share with them the Waterhen experience. In its fifty-two years of existence, the lodge has had only three managers/caretakers. Nine distinguished individuals have served as club president.
The facilities are relatively modest, if not Spartan. Situated on approximately thirty acres, the main lodge has a spacious living/dining room, kitchen, seven guest bedrooms and minimal staff quarters. A separate guesthouse nearby sleeps seven. There are several outbuildings serving useful support functions. These structures remain much the same as they were originally constructed, although there have been a few additions and renovations over the years.
The lodge has been open each fall for the waterfowl shooting enjoyment of its members and guests almost continuously since it's founding. Only two years, in 1963 and 1970, was the club not open. The first party of members and guests usually arrives in late September at the beginning of duck season. The length of time the lodge remained open over the years has varied from one to four weeks. Duck hunting takes place on the public waters of the bay and the connecting rivers. Grouse are pursued in the nearby woodlands and bluffs. More recently, goose hunting has become attractive, which sometimes involves considerable travel to previously scouted agricultural fields. Success for both waterfowl and upland birds has been quite variable over the years.
In this work we will explore The Lore and Legends of Waterhen Lodge.
About the Author
Jeff Churan is an avid duck hunter. He frequently begins pursuit in early September on the western shores of Hudson Bay, where he shares a primitive camp with some friends. He often follows the flight all the way to Mexico, with numerous stops along the migration route. He has developed a family duck hunting area in Missouri, "The Bottoms" and belongs to two other clubs, Waterhen Lodge in Manitoba and Mad Dux Lodge in Arkansas.
After earning a civil engineering degree from the University of Missouri in 1963, Jeff moved to Chillicothe, Missouri to join Irvinbilt Company, the general contracting firm that he heads today. Chillicothe is the hometown of his wife Janet; but no doubt the decision to locate in rural north Missouri was influenced by the duck hunting prospects at nearby Swan Lake National Wildlife Refuge and Fountain Grove State Waterfowl Area. In addition to his construction and farming interests, Jeff has been active in conservation. He was elected to the Board of Directors of Ducks Unlimited in 1982 and has held numerous offices in the organization. He is currently serving his second term as Senior Vice President-Conservation Programs. He also served as Chairman of DU's Institute for Waterfowl and Wetlands Research (IWWR) and as their National Secretary. In Missouri, the Governor appointed him in 1983 to the four-man Conservation Commission. During his six-year term he twice was elected Chairman. He serves on the University of Missouri School of Natural Resources Advisory Committee and presently heads the Missouri Conservation Heritage Foundation Board.
Jeff was honored for his service on the Missouri Conservation Commission when the Department named a four thousand acre portion of Fountain Grove Conservation Area the "Jeff Churan Wetland Complex". He was named the Budweiser Outdoorsman Of The Year in 1997 in recognition of his conservation activities.
Janet and Jeff have three grown children and five grandchildren. He can't wait to share a duck blind with his grandsons, Riley, Luke and Cal.