TALMOON, MINN. — For Minnesota anglers, the opening-day routine Saturday went something like this: 1) grab a minnow, blow warm air on your cold hands; 2) make a cast, jig a little, blow warm air on your freezing fingers; 3) blow some more.
It was like fishing in a giant cocktail glass.
On Bowstring Lake on Saturday, white chunks of ice lined the south shore and the rest of the lake was almost ice -- 41 degrees on the surface in the main lake.
And as the morning progressed, the air temperature seemed to drop a few degrees, turning a north wind as raw as raw can be.
And, then, it began to spit a cold rain, and somebody said it was snowing in Fargo and that was heading our way.
So, was everybody miserable?
Absolutely not. The walleyes were biting. Amazing.
Under conditions typically not favorable for catching anything (except a cold), the landing nets were flying often enough to make bragging rights.