Chicago Sun-Times

The after wildlife

Just-retired biologist Bob Massey spent nearly 34 years with the IDNR and has many experience­s to talk about

- DALE BOWMAN dbowman@suntimes.com @Bowmanouts­ide

While we talked, Bob Massey fished with his son at an Iroquois County pond. Why not? After nearly 34 years with the Illinois Department of Natural Resources (Department of Conservati­on), Massey retired last month as district wildlife biologist (Kankakee, Grundy, Iroquois counties) with plenty of other roles. He was wildlife disease specialist while it was vacant, had a lead role in dealing with chronic wasting disease (CWD), was on a saw crew after Hurricane Katrina and, among many roles in firefighti­ng⁄ prescribed burns, traveled all over the West.

“The biggest one was in Utah, just under 400,000 acres in sage, grass and chaparral,” Massey said.

He earned his bachelor’s degree in science education at Southern Illinois, then started graduate work at SIU’s Wildlife Research Lab. His career began as a wildlife technician at Dixon Springs State Park in Golconda in October 1988.

“I would have stayed down there, but to get a promotion, I had to move and came back to home district,” he said.

Massey, who grew up in Frankfort and went to Lincoln-Way Central, moved in the winter of 1990 to become a district biologist, his “ultimate goal.”

He has banded geese in Hudson Bay in Canada for three weeks (“all done by helicopter’’), done aerial surveys and mentored.

“Bob Massey was the first person I met at the Wilmington Game Farm on my first day as an intern with the DNR,” wildlife biologist Stefanie Fitzsimons messaged. “He immediatel­y took me under his wing, and he has been my mentor ever since! In my 11 years knowing Bob, there are very few days I haven’t been on the phone with him asking questions.”

Memories include deer-check stations.

“You get to visit with guys who are successful,” he said. “There are people I knew their dads, and now their kids are hunting. Those are really good.”

Massey held key roles on CWD, which changed dynamics.

“Biggest thing that changed is [the public]

thinks of the DNR as an adversary now, not the people who are there to help,’’ Massey said. ‘‘That changed a lot since I began. We are not the adversarie­s. I think a lot of that is CWD-related. People think we are out to decimate the deer hunt. It was a perfect storm of CWD, other diseases and deermanage­ment changes. Things will improve; we just have to get over this hump.”

State forester Tom Gargrave shared an office for 32 years with district wildlife biologist Joe Rogus and Massey at the Des Plaines Game Propagatio­n Center in Wilmington.

‘‘We worked many early mornings and very late nights and laughed our way through most of it,’’ Gargrave said. ‘‘Working in field biology for IDNR does not conform to normal work rules, descriptio­ns, labor negotiatio­ns or regulation­s. It’s molded through passion.”

For those who consider a similar path,

Massey advised, “Got to get a master’s because that is the only thing they will look at. Be willing to put in the time and be willing to move to look for a job. Can’t expect an 8-4 job because you work all hours.”

When I asked about wild wildlife sightings, Massey conceded, ‘‘They are a chore at times. For the amount of [cougar] sightings we get, you would think we’re in the Black Hills of South Dakota. If your mind thinks you saw one, that is what you saw.’’

Take the cougar sighting that was a neighbor’s dog or ‘‘the woman in Chicago who reported a mountain lion sitting on a roof, eating a raccoon. She had had a couple of drinks.”

He landed a 2½-pound largemouth bass, caught on a small Rapala.

“We are multitaski­ng, another thing I learned with the state,” he said.

It was time.

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 ?? PROVIDED PHOTOS ?? Bob Massey at a prescribed burn (above) and carrying a caiman and an American alligator (left).
PROVIDED PHOTOS Bob Massey at a prescribed burn (above) and carrying a caiman and an American alligator (left).
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