
Environmental Studies
Major
For Eric Van Dyken (鈥93), who lives in Prinsburg, Minnesota, it wasn鈥檛 a grandparent who taught him the wonder of nature. It was his dad, a teacher who never quite left the classroom, even when he and Van Dyken were hiking, bird watching, camping, fishing, or hunting. 鈥淚 was raised with a love for all things natural,鈥 he says, 鈥渁nd a conditioning to always observe and wonder, a need to feel connected to the earth.鈥
The Van Dykens never went anywhere without seeing creation. 鈥淲e couldn鈥檛 simply drive, walk, or otherwise move past the world around us without stopping to look closely, without asking questions, and praising God for what we saw and learned.鈥
And there was a high school science teacher, Dennis Plummer, who had 鈥渁n infectious love of creation and was instrumental in further fueling my passion for the natural world.鈥
Van Dyken liked the big animals that thrive in the rural Midwest where he grew up, liked them so much that he intended to study veterinary medicine at Dordt and take up residence somewhere in the farm belt as a large-animal veterinarian. But in college, he increasingly found himself drawn toward ecology, a broader range of studies.
Dreams do shift and change with time and circumstance, so much so that vet school began to look less interesting. Instead, he says he began to envision himself more as a 鈥渘atural resource professional of some sort, preferably a wildlife management position.鈥
Van Dyken counts his experience at AuSable Institute as inspiring and formative, an experience he undertook as something of a challenge from Professor Vander Zee. He claims Vander Zee used a little 鈥渞everse psychology鈥 on him when he said he was applying. 鈥淵ou couldn鈥檛 hack it,鈥 Vander Zee told him.
鈥淰ander Zee sharpened my resolve to go and do well,鈥 says Van Dyken. He did.
Before graduating, he married Sara Van Hofwegen (鈥93). With his diploma in hand, the two of them left for Arizona, where Sara鈥檚 brother operated a large dairy southwest of Phoenix. While Eric lacked the veterinary degree, working with dairy cows answered the urge he鈥檇 always had for large-animal veterinary medicine. On the dairy, his work involved 鈥渉usbandry, nutrition, and cow health.鈥
When Van Dyken鈥檚 father鈥檚 health deteriorated, the Van Dykens left Arizona and moved back to central Minnesota, where he began to work as a breeding/gestation manager, later as finishing manager for a company called Holland Pork鈥攈ogs, of which there are many in central Minnesota.
In 2000, Renville County hired him as the County Feedlot Officer and sewage treatment system inspector. Four years later, he took a job for Kandiyohi County, where, officially, he is the county鈥檚 Zoning Administrator. He manages all aspects of land use planning and development in the areas of the county outside of city limits, in a county that, state-wide, has the most hybrid mix of grassland prairies and the deciduous woods so quintessential to 鈥渦p north鈥 Minnesota.
Today, his calendar quickly fills with work brought on by anticipated projects for the upcoming construction season. He鈥檚 scheduled a meeting with the County Administrator and his division director to discuss strained intergovernmental relations with a local township. He reviews permit applications, answering the phone and emails from people seeking input on their various dreams. He hopes to be completing a township-by-township review with clerical staff. Then there鈥檚 the Environmental Assessment Worksheet for an 18-hole golf course to be situated near and around a sensitive, high-quality stream. And, oh yes, that proposed convenience store/gas station, as well as an enforcement letter to a party responsible for a repeated discharge of untreated wastewater in a sensitive area.
The work is sometimes grueling. He鈥檚 discovered, as many of us have, that no one likes to be told what to do, especially when the law dictates what must be done with land鈥攅ven though those same people might enjoy telling others what to do. But his work, he says, is a job he enjoys greatly.
鈥淗ow do we live here without destroying that which we appreciate? How do we balance freedom with mutual responsibility? These questions are at the core of my work, but also are echoes of broader life questions that we all face in our local, state, and national contexts,鈥 he says.