If anthropologists 100 years from now puzzle to understand exactly the who, what and why of the Brainerd Jaycees $150,000 Ice Fishing Extravaganza — the 29th of which will be held Saturday on Gull Lake near Brainerd, Minn. — you couldn't blame them.
Seen through history's long lens, the event from noon to 3 p.m. might appear to be equal parts competition, celebration and carnival, with more than 10,000 mostly fish-seeking, oftentimes clownishly dressed Minnesotans joining like-thinking ice anglers from around the world.
"We've had participants from Australia, China, Switzerland, Denmark and France, among other countries," said this year's Extravaganza chairman, Clint Meyer. "They come to fish."
Well, not everyone …
"I have a party before the contest, and a bigger party afterward," said Claudia Allene, who lives on Gull Lake. "For us, it's turned into quite a cooking thing. I'll have 20 people at my house before the fishing starts, and 50 people afterward."
Allene is among a small cadre of fur coat-wearing women whose presence at the charity fundraiser has become, along with glow-in-the-dark jigs and buckets of fathead minnows, a staple on the square-mile slab of Gull Lake ice where the contest is held.
Since the contest's founding in 1991, the Brainerd Jaycees showcase fundraiser has amassed $3.4 million for local charities, with the largest portion dedicated to Camp Confidence, an outdoor learning center for people with developmental and cognitive disabilities and hearing problems.
"All of the money we raise, 100 percent, goes to charity," Meyer said. "We keep none of it."