The deer was only 50 yards away, but in Saturday's early morning darkness DNR conservation officer Tim Maass reached for his binoculars to make it out.
"Six-point. Nice one,'' he said. "Notice where it came from?"
Maass pointed to a suspected bait pile located a mere 100 yards from the township road where he was parked inside his DNR-issued pickup truck. Hunting over bait is the No. 1 deer hunting offense in Minnesota, and Maass was staked out, ready to write his first citation of the traditional firearms season.
But when the sky brightened in the woodsy exurbs of East Bethel, Maass saw that the suspect's deer stand was empty. He vowed to keep checking it over the next 16 days.
The former West Hennepin policeman was one of 185 DNR enforcement officers dispatched Saturday to uphold game laws, answer public concerns and look out for animal welfare on the busiest hunting day of the year.
In the course of a five-hour ride-along Saturday morning, Maass exited his truck more than a dozen times while on patrol with a second officer in the northern tiers of Anoka and Washington counties. They checked hunters for licenses, investigated rifle shots fired inside a shotgun-only zone, searched two pieces of land for reported trespassers, opened a deer poaching investigation and warned the tipster in the poaching case to stop baiting whitetails with molasses.
Maass planned to rest for two hours Saturday afternoon, then return to work at night to look for "shiners." Opening weekend is prime time for deer hunters who were unsuccessful during the day to illegally stalk and shoot whitetails at night, he said.
"It's a busy area up here," Maass said. "It's just outside of that metro ring, and it's kind of like the Wild West."