Brian Petschl recalls when he loved to fish with a hook and line. Then one day while in central Minnesota, fishing for bass at his cabin, he saw something move in the water.
"What's that?" Petschl recalls asking himself.
Turns out it was a carp, a fish that to Petschl seemed perhaps more abundant in his lake than bass. Bigger, too.
Thus began Petschl's conversion from rod-and-reel fisherman to bowfisherman.
Today, Petschl, of Champlin, no longer carries a tackle box with him onto the water, but instead a bow. Nor will you find him bobbing atop a lake or river in a metal-flaked boat, but instead in a camouflage-colored johnboat specially rigged for bowfishing.
"Bowfishing is the best of both worlds," he said. "It allows you to bring your hunting skills onto the water while fishing."
Last week, Petschl was one of a handful of dedicated bowfishermen roaming the halls of the State Capitol, urging lawmakers to approve new rules that would expand their sport.
Under a pilot program a year old, bowfishing is allowed at night on only 73 Minnesota lakes. Petschl and other members of the Land of Lakes Bowfishing Association (LLBA) want night fishing for carp and other rough fish to be allowed statewide (with the exception of most metro waters, trout streams and certain other lakes and rivers).