Wild critters are a common sight at North Side Elementary School, thanks to Franklin County Conservation Board programs.
Of all those rustic visitors, North Side Principal Charlane Pralle-Janssen will always remember the rat.
Pralle-Janssen returned from recess one day to find the poor thing in a trap. Its head was flopping from side to side.
The rat was fake, and battery-powered. But the principal didn’t know that.
Her scream echoed for miles.
“A lot of kids and Denny (Dennis Carlson) thought that was pretty funny,” Pralle-Janssen said. “He’s quite the character. He’s not only a great conservation guy, he’s a jokester and a storyteller.”
“I like to have fun with people,” said Carlson, who retired last week after 36 years on the job. “When you have fun with people, then you develop kind of a rapport.”
Some 400 folks came to Maynes Grove County Park on April 24 to laugh, eat, remember, and thank Carlson.
Kindergartners from West Fork Elementary School in Sheffield — including Carlson’s granddaughter, Hope Hartman — had scraped together $60 in coins, which they used to buy a tree dedicated to the retiree.
The kids signed a paper and placed it in a time capsule under the tree.
“There are just so many great people around,” said Carlson, 62, a father of three and granddad of two.
As Franklin County Conservation director, he helped with the purchase and development of Maynes Grove, and with the acquisition of the multi-use Rolling Prairie trail, which, when complete, will pass through Coulter, Hampton, Hansell, Dumont, Bristow and Allison. A branch will lead to Beeds Lake State Park.
Pralle-Janssen said the Maynes Grove area was “nothing but trees and prairie grass” when she moved to the area in 1977.
“When I think of Dennis, I think of the condition that our parks are in, and the hours and the extra ambition it took to plan those parks and that dream,” she said. “He’s just made our parks a gathering place. He just did things from his heart that made things extra special.”
Carlson now works part time at Natural Plus Nursery-Landscaping in Clear Lake. He still raises Christmas trees at Carlson Tree Farm and will keep on educating kids about the joys of outdoor life.
In fact, he said, that sounds like a good gravestone epitaph, when that day comes.
“Say, ‘He loved the outdoors and he loved shareing the enthusiasm with young people,’ ” Carlson said.
Dick Johnson writes about people, places and things every other Monday in the Globe Gazette. For comments or column ideas, call 641-421-0556. Send e-mail to dick.johnson@globegazette.com.





