BRAINERD - You really can't make this stuff up: 10,000 people on the ice Saturday, the mercury not yet inching above zero at noon, and the state's chief executive -- a department store heir, no less -- warming up to all of it, a jig stick in his hand, laughing and looking for fish, just like everyone else.
Only in Minnesota.
The attraction near this north-central Minnesota town was the 21st Brainerd Jaycees $150,000 Ice Fishing Extravaganza on Gull Lake, an annual spectacle that this year awarded -- never mind the name -- $190,000 in prizes.
None of which, in the end, was issued to the state's newly installed governor, who seemed bothered not a whit by the very chilly weather.
"I grew up playing hockey outdoors on days like this," Mark Dayton said. "It's a beautiful Saturday afternoon in January."
And not just to Minnesotans. Anglers traveled to Brainerd from as far away as Sweden, according to contest organizers, to impale minnows onto tiny jigs and drop their tantalizing outfits into frigid water.
One such interloper, Andy Schultz, who lives near Milwaukee, won the top prize, a new Ford pickup, for hoisting a 7.18-pound northern from 11 feet of water a mere 15 minutes after the contest began.
"It's the biggest fish I ever caught," said Schultz, who arrived in Brainerd on Thursday with five friends, also from Wisconsin, but who still managed nearly to be late to the Extravaganza.