ISLE, MINN. — "Fish on!" Tony Roach shouted, his ice-fishing rod bent in half as he set the hook. "He slammed it."
Roach, smiling broadly, eased the fish through the hole in the ice.
"Look at that ... man, oh man," he said, admiring the 6- to 7-pound brilliant green walleye before slipping it back into the cold waters of Lake Mille Lacs.
Tony Roach, 32, had dreamed of becoming a guide and professional angler since he was in kindergarten. Now the dream has come true. Five years ago, he quit his construction job and moved his family from the Twin Cities to Lake Mille Lacs. Now he's on the water daily, looking for fish.
And usually finding them.
He's already made a name for himself as a guide, appearing on outdoor TV shows and giving seminars at sports shows. He has a long list of fishing equipment sponsors. He owns Roach's Guide Service and has a bevy of guides who work with him.
Last week, Roach and two friends -- joined by a cameraman from MidWest Outdoors TV and me -- found hot walleye action on the recently frozen, snow-swept Lake Mille Lacs. Using four-wheelers to haul portable houses and fishing gear, we motored about five miles out and fished under a blue sky with temperatures barely breaking double digits.
The sprawling lake, which just a week earlier was open water, was void of other anglers. We found about 11 inches of ice -- meaning Mille Lacs soon will be covered with thousands of fish houses. Roach doesn't mind the competition, because he marches to a different drummer.