Bowfishing -- shooting fish with bows and arrows tethered to a line -- isn't allowed by the city of Minnetonka without a special permit.
Excelsior doesn't have a bowfishing law; the city thinks its jurisdiction is limited to what happens on land.
The problem is that those two cities -- and 12 others along Lake Minnetonka's shoreline -- have a mishmash of rules, or in some cases none at all, about the sport, creating confusion about what's allowed on the lake or the shoreline.
"For those who want to bowfish, it's hard to tell them what they can and cannot do," said Greg Nybeck, executive director of the Lake Minnetonka Conservation District. "The cities are all over the board on this."
The conservation district asked for feedback from cities this summer and is trying to come up with a common ordinance to clarify the rules of bowfishing for all communities around the lake. The district's public safety committee is expected to have a draft ordinance ready later this month.
With bowfishers often standing on platforms on boats and using menacing-looking bows, the sport has raised some concerns about safety. Minnetonka, for example, has said its police force would need to be comfortable with the new rules before the city agrees to them.
The ordinance is likely to allow bowfishing on open water in summer, Nybeck said, but would require a 300-foot setback from swimming beaches or swimmers. It may also set nighttime limits of two hours after sunset and one hour before sunrise.
Brian Petschl, past president of the Land of Lakes Bowfishing Association, said it makes sense to have a common ordinance, as long as restrictions don't go too far.