IN NORTHWEST WISCONSIN — Call it the anti- training camp, this small backwoods lake where, a few days ago, Bud Grant piloted a pontoon boat, looking to tangle with a largemouth bass, a northern pike or a mess of sunnies.
No two-a-day practices here, no snoopy sports reporters, no hot nights in Mankato dormitories, windows yawning, hoping to catch a breeze.
"I can understand why Brett Favre doesn't want to go to training camp," said Grant, the retired Vikings coach. "I didn't, either."
Grant spoke on a peerless summer evening, in a month that for the entirety of his working life he didn't know. "I've really just learned since I retired how wonderful August is," he said.
With him on his roomy craft was Pat Smith, a woman Grant has grown close to following the death of his wife of 60 years, Pat Grant. Along also was Norb Berg, a longtime hunting and fishing companion of Grant's and the person he credits for "saving his life" after he moved to Minnesota from Winnipeg in 1967 to coach the Vikings.
"When I came to the Twin Cities, I didn't have a place to hunt ducks," Grant said. Then he met Berg, an executive at the time with Control Data Corp., which owned a swath of what is now the Minnesota Valley National Wildlife Refuge in Bloomington.
"Norb allowed me to hunt down there," Grant said, "which is how in the fall I could get into the marsh for a couple of hours before going to the office or a game.
"I don't know what I would have done otherwise."