Pride in our People
Annual Report
The Globe
Saturday, March 28, 2020 H1
LOCAL STORIES OF PEOPLE IN OUR COMMUNITIES
Driven to inspire Kalfs doesn’t let paralysis keep him from hunting, the outdoors By Julie Buntjer jbuntjer@dglobe.com
Kalfs’ Okabena home is filled with trophies from OKABENA — From the experiences he’s had in mounted head of a horned the great outdoors. Amid the displays are antelope to the perching wild tom turkey, and photographs of Kalfs on from the sprawling black his adventures in northern Wyoming bear skin rug to a pair of Minnesota, mounted deer heads, Lloyd and South Dakota.
One captures him while fly-fishing in a stream in the Black Hills. That one, he says, was taken the week before his accident. The car crash on that evening of June 15, 2013, left Kalfs a quadriplegic, but it hasn’t dampened his spirits and his quest to enjoy all that life and the outdoors has to offer. “One of the things that drives me most is I want to be an inspiration to other people — to especially go out and do what you want to do,” he said. “We live in a place and time that if you want to do something, there’s a will and a way to do it. “I’m living proof of that.”
Life interrupted
Kalfs grew up on a farm a couple of miles south of Okabena, graduating from then-Southwest Star Concept in the spring of 2007. During high school he was active in the FFA, competing in the fish and wildlife and ag mechanics judging teams, and earning a trip to the National FFA Convention in Louisville, Kentucky on the nursery and landscape team. His interest in everything outdoors led him to Northland College in Ashland, Wisconsin in the fall of 2007, where Julie Buntjer / The Globe he majored in natural Lloyd Kalfs is shown with the antelope he hunted in resources and played four Montana. An Action Trackchair helps Kalfs maneuver years of college basketball. various terrain so he is able to continue to enjoy his time “They’re the No. 2 school outdoors. in Wisconsin as far as fish
Special to The Globe
Clayton Miller (from left), Tessa Moser and Kyle Metzger (right) join Lloyd Kalfs on a South Dakota turkey hunt. Kalfs was successful in bagging this wild turkey. and wildlife,” Kalfs said of the college, located an hour east of Duluth along the shore of Lake Superior. “It was a very fun place to go to college and to be an outdoorsman.” Following graduation in the spring of 2011 — seven months after his father’s death — Kalfs returned to Okabena and began working as a water resource technician for the Cottonwood County Soil and Water Conservation District in Windom. He’d been in the job for two
years when, on a summer evening drive toward home, Kalfs’ life was forever changed. “I had a heart condition I didn’t know about,” he shared. “My heart stopped when I was driving, and that’s what caused the accident.” Kalfs was alone in the car when it left the roadway and rolled three times in a ditch a mile from his house, and a mile from the farm where he’d grown up. A neighbor discovered the crash when
he saw headlights shining into a farm field. Two vertebrae in Kalfs’ neck were broken in the crash, the C6 and C7, which caused the spinal injury and paralysis. Doctors surgically fused the neck and, while in the intensive care unit, it was discovered that Kalfs’ heart would occasionally stop beating — once for slightly more than a minute.
KALFS: Page H3
Van Ecks have been ‘hair’ in Lake Wilson for 55 years and counting By Scott Mansch The Globe
For years now, Jack has been the only working LAKE WILSON — male barber left in Murray Nearly 60 years ago at the County. Of course, it Arkota Ballroom in Sioux wasn’t always this way. Falls, a young dancer from rural South Dakota Keeping on cuttin’ “I started barber school named Virginia noticed in 1963,” Jack said. “It a Minnesota man in part was a six-month term. because of his tie tack. From there I came back to It was in the form of a Lake Wilson. George the small scissors. Barber (Gowin) wanted “I’m a beautician,” to retire, so I apprenticed Virginia told Jack Van Eck. under him. “Well,” said Jack, “I’m a “At that time there were barber.” at least a dozen (male) Says Virginia: “We barbers in Murray County. just kind of clicked from I knew there were five in then on.” three different shops in The laughter from both Slayton, two in Fulda, and at this memory brightens Hadley even had a parta delightful abode just off time barber. Iona had Minnesota 30 in this small one from Wilson’s who Murray County hamlet would come in and cut that has served as home hair at night. Currie had a base for Jack and Virginia full-time barber. He was since 1965. Old Pete.” Their bond is much Only Jack, who stronger than a common purchased the shop from cause of hair care. And George the Barber, is still that legacy, along with in business. It’s been that a love for this resilient way for a decade or more. community of about 230, is what distinguishes them. VAN ECKS: Page H2 Jack and Virginia Van Eck have been married for 55 years.
Scott Mansch/The Globe