ON LAKE MILLE LACS — Scorching as it is was on July 4th -- 100 degrees or thereabouts by midafternoon -- this big lake seemed hotter still, offering up walleyes and smallmouth bass to anglers willing to brave the relentless heat and sun.
So good was the action that fireworks festooning against black skies Wednesday evening throughout central Minnesota withered by comparison.
Which underscores just how big a deal fishing on Mille Lacs is this summer.
And how unusual.
Because only a relative handful of lakes in this state or any other can cough up so regularly oversized specimens of these two species on the same day to the same anglers with only minor changes in rigging, technique and position.
But on Mille Lacs this summer, catches of this type are common, satisfying anglers no end.
With one caveat:
Anglers who want fish to eat can be frustrated, unless they're willing to eat bass (or northerns). Because eating-size Mille Lacs walleyes that are legal to keep -- those less than 17 inches long -- are relatively rare.