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Briefly

Mayo invites youth to grief camp

MADISON LAKE — Mayo Clinic Health System Hospice is hosting Camp Oz, to help support children and teens who have lost loved ones, from 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Oct. 6 at Camp Patterson on Lake Washington in Madison Lake.

Camp Oz is a day-long grief camp for children and teens, ages 6 to 18, who have experienced the death of someone in their life. Children are able to share their feelings of grief and participate in remembrance activities. They also have an opportunity to connect with others who have experienced loss, helping participants understand they are not alone.

Camp Oz is offered free of charge. Mayo asks that one registration form per child be submitted prior to participating in the camp. Registration is free and open until Sept. 26. For more information, call (507) 594-2989 or (800) 327-3721, ext. 4-2989 (toll-free). Visit mayoclinichealthsystem.org/classes-and-events/camp-oz to learn more.

Couple restoring native plants

AUSTIN (AP) — A couple is bringing back native prairie grasses, plants and flowers on nearly 100 acres of land in southern Minnesota.

Ken Trom, 83, and Gloria Trom, 78, planted a mix of more than two dozen species around their land near the Cedar River in June. The plants included butterfly milkweed, prairie blazingstar, stiff goldenrod, sneezeweed, black-eyed Susan and partridge pea.

“You don’t get this mix of stuff and wildlife anymore,” Ken Trom said. “But it’s part of the natural order.”

The couple has lived in their country home for nearly 60 years. During that time they’ve done a variety of conservationist work, including adding in hillsides, tree windbreaks, a fish pond and gardens.

“We already have the woods, the river and everything to support wildlife,” Trom said. “Now we just put this in, (the wildlife) will like that, and it will tie right in.”

Trom said he’s excited to see what animals the new plants attract. He said the couple already sees deer, monarch butterflies and bluebirds on their land.

Trom was recently named the 2018 Outstanding Wildlife Conservationist for Mower County to honor his decades of conservation work.

“I used to be on the board, and I wanted to start up this awards program,” he said. “I used to help give out awards, and this time I get one.”

Trom, a former banker, said he enjoys working on improvements for his land.

“In the banking business, you just think of the money, you know,” he said. “This is something you can really get your hooks into, and I always had a hankering for it.”

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