What we accept as normal winter behavior here in the Upper Midwest is often viewed with disbelief by people in the Sun Belt.
For example, if you told a waitress at a small-town Texas cafe that people in Minnesota drive and walk on water, use an oversized drill to punch holes in the ice, flip over a 5-gallon pail for a seat and fish, she'd likely get a grin on her face waiting for the punch line to your joke.
And she'd be more surprised to know we compete in contests to see who can catch the biggest fish through the ice. Or that those contests often raise money for charities — including honoring the life and tragic death of an 18-year-old Lindstrom man.
More on that later.
Regardless, Minnesotans love their hard-water fishing. In addition to the open-air pail seats, we erect pop-up tents, fire up small propane heaters, take the gloves off and fish. Or we haul houses, complete with bunk beds, kitchens and cribbage boards, out to join whole communities of ice shacks. And when we get them set, we open the floor boards and fish.
On the more popular Minnesota lakes, there are probably more ice shelters than houses in a small Texas town.
Every winter, hundreds of thousands of Minnesotans pull on their snowmobile suits and pac boots, head to their favorite lake and stare at a bobber in an 8-inch hole, willing for it to disappear. Al Stevens, Department of Natural Resources fisheries consultant, says the agency's surveys consistently show that 30 percent of fishing in Minnesota is done on ice.
Last year the DNR issued permits for 47,686 ice shelters, houses that are pulled to can't-miss locations and left for the winter. Before 2007, when the DNR dropped portables from the permit-necessary category, Minnesotans registered 140,000 ice shelters every winter.