On a sandy beach in North Mississippi Regional Park, a dozen city kids had some fun along with fishing lessons last week.
Outings like this are part of a National Park Service effort to hook them on the Mississippi River.
Using a $7,800 National Park Foundation grant, the Park Service pays for school buses to take St. Paul fifth-graders to the river. It also partners with the YMCA and Wilderness Inquiry to teach young people fishing, canoeing, camping and other outdoor skills to keep them coming back to the river.
"We have a progression of programs to get kids to know and eventually canoe on the Mississippi River," said Paul Labovitz, superintendent of the 72-mile-long Mississippi National River and Recreation Area that runs from Dayton to Hastings. "We familiarize kids with the park, teach them how to use bike trails or transit to get to the river and have some fun," Labovitz said.
Ranger Mary Blitzer, wearing shorts, water sandals, a brown ranger shirt and a badge, led the kids and supervisors on a narrow dirt path through big cottonwoods and underbrush to the beach near 49th Avenue and Lyndale Avenue N. She had already caught a baby turtle, which the kids held or observed in a water bucket. Soon she was telling Mariah Coleman, 16, how to string a fishing line through the eyelets on her rod and how to choose a hook and bait.
"How are you feeling?" Blitzer asked, holding up a hook. "You want a big fish?"
"I want a big fish," replied Mariah, of Bloomington, who goes to the Southdale Y. She stuck corn kernels on her hook and cast the line into the river.
Olga Oliver, 14, of Minneapolis, landed the first catch: a 5-pound, tail-flapping carp. Blitzer gave Olga a high-five and helped unhook the big fish.