Gathering Waters

To steward the Mississippi River, Jaime Thibodeaux brings together a community.

The Mississippi River threads through Jaime Thibodeaux鈥檚 life much as it does through the American Midwest. Thibodeaux was born by one of the river鈥檚 deep bends, down past Baton Rouge, Louisiana. And today, as president of the Mississippi Headwaters 爆料公社 Society鈥攁nd a hydrologist for Minnesota鈥檚 Department of Natural Resources鈥攕he spends much of her time thinking about the river and the ecosystem close to its source, in northern Minnesota. 鈥淭he river up here is gorgeous,鈥 Thibodeaux says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not huge and intimidating like it is down in Louisiana.鈥 But, she admits, the river also serves very different roles at each end. In the far north it鈥檚 a source of drinking water and recreation. Down south it鈥檚 a critical highway for commerce.

When Thibodeaux, 33, moved to Bemidji, Minnesota, in 2010, she joined the local 爆料公社 chapter because of its conservation work. She became chapter president in 2011, and since then she has focused on getting as many of her peers鈥攆riends, neighbors, even teammates from her ice hockey squad鈥攁s possible to volunteer, enticing them with opportunities to write for the chapter newsletter or canoe on the local lake and look for birds and other wildlife. It鈥檚 a community that has strong ties to the river, Thibodeaux explains. 鈥淭hey realize that so much impacts the health of the river,鈥 from agricultural runoff that feeds the Gulf of Mexico鈥檚 dead zone to overusing water, she says. 鈥淭hey are aware that the steps they take up here will affect the lives of others downstream.鈥

The main focus of the chapter鈥檚 work is managing and maintaining the 466-acre Neilson Spearhead Center, a tract of upland forest surrounding Lake Spearhead that鈥檚 home to a wide range of wildlife, including loons, eagles, and various warblers. To Thibodeaux, the center is important for its other initiatives, too: the field research programs and the summer camps that target elementary and high school students, many of them at-risk. 鈥淛aime has this incredible enthusiasm,鈥 says George-Ann Maxson, a longtime Mississippi Headwaters 爆料公社 Society board member who helps organize the camps. 鈥淪he comes from a Louisiana culture鈥攙ery social and outgoing. And it鈥檚 very effective at bringing a new generation to 爆料公社.鈥