Larry Dahlberg has traveled the world over to film his TV show, "The Hunt for Big Fish," sometimes risking life and limb to catch monstrous critters most people have never heard of.
Anderson: Teach a kid to fish? It's catching

Tuesday morning, he drifted atop waters decidedly more local, trekking with his wife Marilyn and grandson, Vaughn, from the Dahlbergs' home near Taylors Falls to Green Lake near Chisago City, a distance covered in about a half-hour.
Fish targeted: sunfish.
"I had been on the lake a couple of days earlier, filming, and saw sunfish nests as thick as ants," Larry said.
Marilyn and Larry's intent was to have some fun with Vaughn, while exposing him gradually to the joys of fishing. "You don't want to push kids," Larry said.
First stop was the garden, with a shovel. "Kids relate as much to digging for worms as they do catching fish," Larry said.
Then it was off to the lake, where Vaughn fed sunnies before trying to catch them, an exercise that helped him visualize what lurked beneath the water's surface, while connecting him directly to fish.
And fishing.
Which makes a point: You can't develop anglers out of sons or daughters, nephews or nieces, if you don't get them onto the water.
Vaughn can attest to that.
Tuesday morning, he cruised through a bottle of juice and an apple or two while boating a bunch of sunnies -- an occasion he'll likely never forget.
"Last year he had a sunnie hooked and a 36-inch northern came up and ate it," Larry said.
Try getting that kind of action on TV, or a laptop.
In Minnesota, residents can fish free this weekend when accompanied by a kid.