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Fall Gathering and Silent Auction

Ober Foundation Annual Fall Gathering and Online Silent Auction!

The annual Ober Foundation Fall Gathering is being held Saturday, October 29 from 2:00 – 4:00 p.m. Central Time at the Wargo Nature Center. You won’t want to miss this year’s gathering! We hope to see you there. If you plan to attend, please register for the fall gathering by clicking on the red button below.

Our second online silent auction has been launched. It is a fun way to support the Ober Foundation and a great opportunity to grab gifts for loved ones – both kids and adults – or get something special just for you. The auction includes:

  • A variety of framed artwork
  • Signed books by many beloved Minnesota authors (Ober loved books!) including Anton Treuer
  • A handcrafted walnut cutting board with maple trim
  • A weekend stay at a rustic cabin
  • A custom limerick written about a person of your choosing by Garrison Keillor
  • A custom limerick written about a person of your choice by Garrison Keillor
  • A special collector Mallard Island broadside
  • A chance to get some of your special  books professionally appraised
  • Two tickets to a Prairie Companion show with back stage passes
  • And more…..

To access and participate in this year’s online auction, please click on the following link: SILENT AUCTION LINK

To Register for the Fall Gathering, please click on the following link: REGISTRATION

Silent auction donations are still welcome. Please contact us at info@eober.org.

Wargo Nature Center:

7701 Main St
Lino Lakes, MN  55038

Fall Gathering and Silent Auction2022-10-24T16:24:58+00:00

Oberholtzer Foundation Fall Gathering

Fall Gathering/Fundraiser

You are invited to the Ober Foundation annual Fall Gathering/Fundraiser on October 29 from 2:00 – 4:00 pm at the Wargo Nature Center. You won’t want to miss this popular gathering!

Some highlights:

  • Participate in opening ceremony with our Elder in Residence
  • Enjoy live music performed by Prudence Johnson, Dan Chouinard, and Randy Sabien
  • Participate in our exciting silent auction that includes books from many well-known Minnesota writers, including Anton Treuer’s “Cultural Toolbox”, signed books by Louise Erdrich, and kids books by Margi Preus. Bid on a weekend get away to a rustic cabin in central Minnesota, or on getting a limerick written about your favorite person by Garrison Keillor! These are only a few of the exciting items to bid on to support the foundation.
  • Hear about flood recovery efforts on Mallard Island and an exciting new initiative driven by the foundation’s focus on flood resiliency.
  • Enjoy a hike before or after the event on the grounds of the Wargo Nature Center.

Please RSVP for the event by clicking here: RSVP

Donations are welcomed! You can donate by clicking here: DONATE

If you have an item to donate to the silent auction, please click here: SILENT AUCTION

If you have questions, please contact us t 651-867-4649. See you soon!

Oberholtzer Foundation Fall Gathering2022-10-06T18:24:47+00:00

Free Performance and Art Show at the Backus Community Center

An Evening of Stories, Laughs, and Songs

The Oberholzter Foundation and the Backus Community Center are hosting an upcoming art show and evening performance that are free to the community and open to all! Come join the fun. After a summer of historic flooding, we all need to take a moment to come together and enjoy these respected and beloved Minnesota artists and performers.
What and When
  • A visual art show, entitled Natural Wonders II, in the Gallery at the Backus Community Center from August 8-12.
  • A reception with the artists and the performers from the evening show on August 12 from 5:30-6:30 in the Gallery at the Backus Community Center.
  • An Evening of Stories, Laughs, and Songs happens on August 12 at 7:00 pm in the auditorium of the Backus Community Center. There will be a bar with alcohol and non alcoholic beverages available. The Center is handicap accessible.
Who
  • The visual art show, which will include paintings and photography, will feature works from Mark Granlund, Mary Ludington, and Karen McCall. Mary specializes in fine art animal photography. Mark is a painter working in oil and watercolors. Karen is an artist in photography based work.
  • The evening performance will feature storyteller Kevin Kling, songbird Prudence Johnson, pianist extraordinaire Dan Chouinard, violin virtuoso Randy Sabien, and special guest Native comedian Pebaamibines. Recordings and books by the artists will be available for purchase.
Where 
  • The Backus Community Center is located at 900 5th St International Falls, MN. Their phone number is 218-285-7225.
Many Thanks!
  • This free event was made possible by a generous grant from the Marshall N. Knudson Family Community Fund.
Free Performance and Art Show at the Backus Community Center2022-07-19T21:06:43+00:00

Historic Flooding On Rainy Lake

Historic Flood Impacts Mallard Island and Buildings

June 15, 2022

After heavy snowfall levels late winter followed by a late ice out this spring, the Rainy Lake area experienced flooding levels that exceeded both the 2014 flood and the 1950 flood.  Once the ice was out, the Ober Foundation got volunteers on Mallard right away to begin flood mitigation efforts.

The first family to help were the Rundells. They spent a weekend preparing Cedarbark House and other areas that would be impacted first by the rising waters. The Thrune family came in next and continued mitigation efforts as waters rose. Rebecca Otto, Executive Director, and Mairi Doerr, Summer Program Director joined the Thrunes and continued mitigation efforts. A big focus was saving the foundation’s book collection, which was threatened by the rising waters. We had to shut off the power for about a week and a half. A slimmed down version of our carpentry work week crew continued on flood mitigation. They were able to finish moving the book collection and restore a small amount of power to Mallard.

Mallard’s topography does not make it conducive to sand bagging, so our approach has been mitigation, monitoring, followed by more mitigation. Volunteer and staff safety has been key. We have been taking this flood one-day-at-a-time. Each day brings something new.

It appears lake levels have finally peaked, and we may be on the decline from here on out. At this point, the only dry buildings on Mallard are Big House, Winter House, Bird House and the Tool Shed. Weather has been relatively calm and and we have had some sunshine, but that changed over the last few days. An east wind was blowing today, which is hard on Cedarbark House and Front House. Cedarbark House has taken on so much water that waves can potentially be quite damaging.

Dan Kraker from MPR did a very good story on the flood, the historic significance of Mallard Island, and about Ober’s wilderness legacy. To hear the story, please click MPR story

Jana Hollingsworth from the Star Tribune also did a story on the flooding and Mallard Island. If you have a subscription, please click Star Tribune

Sabrina Ullman from WDIO did a nice job on a story early on about the flooding at Mallard. To view the story, please click: WDIO

What Next?

It will be some time before the water levels return to normal. Once they do, we know there will be substantial clean up work followed by repairs.

How Can You Help?

Mallard Island and the Ober Foundation have survived and thrived over the decades with the help of volunteer labor and financial donations from our supporters. We know we will need both to weather this storm plus some new friends.

If you you are able and willing to volunteer with clean up efforts, when clean up is possible, please let us know by emailing Rebecca at info@eober.org

If you can make a financial donation, or know someone else who may be able to, it would be meaningful for the foundation. Please click on: www.eober.org/donate

We will be seeking grants to help with the work and expenses ahead. If you are a skilled grant writer and are willing to assist the foundation, please let Rebecca know by emailing or calling her.

You can view photos, videos and track the status of Mallard and the lake levels on our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/ErnOber

Together, we will make it through this!

Historic Flooding On Rainy Lake2023-01-25T15:39:22+00:00

990 Report – 2021 Released

990PF Report 

The Oberholtzer Foundation 2021 990PF report is now available. You can access the report from Foundation tab on the home page.

A big thank you to Antoinette Hickey at Chapman and Cutler for compiling this important report for the foundation. We are truly grateful!

990 Report – 2021 Released2022-05-09T20:33:55+00:00

Board of Directors

New Board Members!

At the February meeting, the board elected three new members; Erika Bailey-Johnson, David Harrington, and Jerry Williams. We are so pleased to have them join the Ober Foundation!

Ericka has served as the Sustainability Director at Bemidji State University for 15 years, is the People and the Environment Coordinator on campus, and the Director of the Niizhoo-gwayakochigewin academic program. She lives in Bemidji. Erika has been a big supporter and recruiter for our Stewards of the Wilderness Program, and was responsible for recruiting Teghan, our newest caretaker! Ericka is an enrolled member of the Red Lake Band of Ojibwe. She will be serving on our Program Committee.

David is a semi-retired judge on the State District Court bench in the 9th District, and serves as a part time judge for the Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe, the Red Lake Band of Ojibwe, and does some work as a Court of Appeals Justice for the White Earth Band of Ojibwe. He lives in Bemidji. He comes with much nonprofit board experience. David is also a member of both the Koochiching County and Beltrami County Historical Societies and has an interest the historic aspect of our living museum. He loves recreating in the outdoors, is an active photographer, and skis. He skied over to Mallard a few times this winter to check on things, and took a few photos. He will be serving on the Facilities Committee.

Jerry told us that in the ’60s when he was working at the paper mill, he enjoyed a few pancake breakfasts on Sundays with Ober on Mallard! Jerry lives in Rochester, but spends a good portion of the summer on Rainy Lake. His son and son’s wife own and operate Camp Idlewood, an old family resort up the lake from Mallard. Jerry is retired and is the former Superintendent of the Rochester Public Schools. He has extensive nonprofit board experience. He will serve on the Finance Committee.

Welcome to our newest Ober Foundation Board members!

Board of Directors2022-05-05T18:59:20+00:00

Winter Newsletter Column

Stars Over Mallard

My favorite word in Anishinaabemowin is anangokaa, which means “there are many stars.” During my first night on Mallard, I woke up suddenly around midnight and stumbled out of Bird House as if in a dream. The sky was crisp and clear and studded with more stars than I had ever seen. I searched for, and found, the constellation that Pebaamibines Jones had advised us to find: Madoodiswan, the Sweat Lodge, a half-circle of seven stars. Then I spun around in a circle, trying to map as many constellations as I could. By the time I returned to Bird House, the only word in my head was anangokaa.

Other memories of my week on Mallard play in my mind like film reels: an early morning sighting of a wood duck paddling towards Gull Island, a line of ducklings trailing in her wake; a painted turtle digging a hole behind the library with her strong back feet, building a vault for her clutch of eggs; the warm sun on Ober’s wooden deck, illuminating a page of Pebaam’s workbook Daga Anishinaabemodaa. But when I think of Mallard Island, my first thought is of the stars.

My second thought is of Nookomis, Minisinaanakwadook, who gave me advice that I must work hard to remember since I’ve left Mallard: Drink when you’re thirsty, eat when you’re hungry, she told me. When I first came to Mallard, I wasn’t looking for that kind of wisdom. I study Comparative Literature at the University of Chicago, and Ober’s archives have several rare books that our library does not, including Daga Anishinaabemodaa. I particularly wanted to read the complete publications of the Smithsonian Bureau of American Ethnology, one of Ober’s rarer collections. I spent hours reading outdoors on Mallard, soaking up the sun and the words in equal measure. But what I learned from Ober’s books was supplementary to the knowledge I learned from natural observation. I think Ober understood that: the books are valuable, but it is the life of their home, the life of Turtle Island, that gives them meaning. I remember the words of Anishinaabe that I learned on Mallard more clearly than any word I learned in a library.

As a PhD student, I spend most of my time squinting at my screen or hunting down a particular passage in an obscure book. It’s hard to maintain the mindset I had on Mallard when I’m caught up in the grime and hustle of city life. My posture has definitely deteriorated. It takes effort to do what Nookomis’ name suggests and look up at the clouds. But as soon as I tilt my head back and take a deep breath, I remember why I study what I do.

On Chicago’s rare clear nights, I like to sit out on my fire escape and look for the stars. Sometimes I sing to myself, the only song I know in Anishinaabemowin:

Naangoodinong                                                       Every now and then

Ninbabaazhawendaan niiyaw                           I go around feeling sorry for myself

Babaamaashiyaan giizhigong                           And all the while the wind carries me across the sky

This song was recorded by a man named Ga’gandac from White Earth, Minnesota, in 1908. As  I sing it, I hear the great tradition of mystics all over the world; such a song might have been sung by William Blake, or Matsuo Basho, or Rabindranath Tagore. In my scholarship I try to make such comparisons, for the benefit of people who aren’t familiar with the beauty of Anishinaabemowin. And whenever I go around feeling sorry for myself, I think of Mallard, and I begin to feel the great wind that carries us all.

For the people who love Mallard like we do, the wind is always blowing towards Rainy Lake. It is my privilege to be able to return this summer, to help preserve Ober’s vast archives. It is also my dream to be trained as a caretaker, to share this place that is so dear to my heart with future visitors. I hope someday to wake someone else up at midnight, push them outside, point to the stars and whisper, anangokaa.

Miigwech,

Julia Marsan

Julia is a graduate student of native/indigenous literatures of North America. Her dissertation focuses on Indigenous literatures collected by anthropologists in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. She was a 2021 Mallard Island Individual Projects participant.

Stars Over Mallard photo by Craig Fernholz

Winter Newsletter Column2022-02-23T17:15:29+00:00

Charlie Kelly

Charlie Kelly

It is with heavy hearts that we announce the passing of Charlie Kelly, a very important member of the Oberholtzer Foundation community.

No one loved Mallard Island more than Charlie Kelly, and that says a lot. Charles A. Kelly passed away yesterday, August 10th. Charlie followed in his father’s footsteps as a friend and staunch supporter of Ernest Oberholtzer’s work and island life, and he stepped into a career in estate law in part because of the experience of organizing the legal effort after Ober’s death. They were good friends— Ober and Charlie— and corresponded during the last decades of Ober’s life. Charlie was then the second Foundation board president, stepping up after the death of Hugh Monahan in 1980. He served in many roles with the organization, most of them concerned with the archives or the investments and financial health of the organization.

In recent years, he and his wife Jean E. were repeatedly dinner hosts to the foundation’s board at their summer home in Ranier. They were constant supporters of the many volunteers and diverse programs that happen on Mallard Island. Jean E. Kelly’s son, George Glazier, now serves as the Foundation’s board president.

Charlie Kelly2021-08-11T20:34:10+00:00

Board Elects New Trustee

Ober Foundation Elects New Trustee

The Oberholtzer Foundation Board of Trustees elected unanimously Keir Johnson at their June 18 board meeting to serve as their newest board member. Keir will be a wonderful addition to the board. He grew up in International Falls and his parents knew Ober. He has wonderful memories of visiting Ober’s home in Franks Bay and touring Mallard Island.  As a small child, he was impressed by the magic of Mallard Island and all of the eclectic and unlikely structures. He currently is an attorney and trust officer at a bank in Grinnell Iowa and has expertise in planned giving. He has a significant amount of experience in nonprofit administration. It is not lost on Keir that over time, many bankers and lawyers were inspired by Ober’s  passion and vision and they provided him with both practical and financial support that supported Ober’s work. Please help us welcome Keir!

Board Elects New Trustee2021-07-19T15:42:16+00:00

Transition From Bob Norbie, Foundation President:

Transition
From Bob Norbie, Foundation President:

The challenges of 2020 – the pandemic and its impact on Mallard Island programs – reminds me how important and powerful the Anishinaabe expression, Gi-bezhig-oomin, is in our lives. Translated, it means “We are All One” and it has become central to how we breathe life into our mission. As uncertain and disruptive as last year was, Gi-bezhig-oomin reassures us that when we nurture and revere our relationships, think collaboratively, act as one and responsibly to steward the earth, we can find our way through a myriad of challenges and changes. In spite of the coronavirus, the assault on our environment, the racism, and the incivility and divisiveness of politics that have ravaged our nation, by working in the spirit of Gi-bezhig-oomin, Mallard Island continues to be a beacon for calm and harmony—if we pause long enough to listen. Indeed, listening is one of Mallard Island’s most important tenets. Mallard Island encourages and enables her guests to deliberately and deeply listen. To listen to the familiar grand song of the tiny White Throated Sparrow. To listen to the wave’s raucous laughter against the rocky shoreline. To listen to the love notes whispering through the White Pines. And to listen to one’s inner thoughts and feelings from any number of magical spots on Mallard Island. The strength of Gi-bezhig-oomin in the life of our mission was evident with the transition of leadership coming into the New Year. Herein I speak of our beloved executive director, Beth Waterhouse, who retired at year-end after serving passionately and skillfully for 13 years, but not before supporting a smooth and seamless transition with our new and very capable executive director, Rebecca Otto. Herein I speak of our past board president, Peggy Anne Smith, who for the past three years faithfully, gracefully and purposefully shepherded our mission, vision and values. Predictable as the rising sun off the easterly end of Mallard Island, Peggy brought much sunshine and clarity through the quality of her person and leadership of the Foundation. Thank you, Beth and Peggy, for being you! As we look forward with new leadership and a vision for helping the world live in harmony through the teachings of Ober and Mallard Island, we invite each of you to continue being a steward of this spot-on Rainy Lake and wilderness in general. We look after and care for these jewel islands (Mallard, Crow, Hawk and Gull) during this vulnerable time. When we serve in the spirit of Gi-bezhig-oomin, our connectedness and oneness will ensure that these treasures will enlighten generations to come. Chi-Miigwech, Bob Norbie President, Board of Trustees

Transition From Bob Norbie, Foundation President:2021-02-17T18:35:53+00:00
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