DULUTH — Minnesota fisheries workers on the North Shore will never denigrate the 25-foot Boston Whaler that provided them safe travel on Lake Superior for more than three decades.
But the heavily used fiberglass Whaler worked beyond its life expectancy. What's now cutting waves, netting fish and dodging storms on the largest Great Lake is Blackfin — a sleek, all-aluminum vessel made in a Twin Ports shipyard expressly for the Department of Natural Resources.
Powered by a pair of offshore outboard motors and stationed at DNR's French River Hatchery on a custom-made trailer, the finished rig was authorized for payment in May at the final price of $231,805. One of its first missions this spring was on rough water outside Knife River to assess the health and abundance of Lake Superior lake trout.
On that run, Cory Goldsworthy, the DNR's North Shore area fisheries supervisor, operated a hydraulic net-puller while flanked by two fellow scientists who picked fish out of the seine. At three locations, they harvested more than 100 beefy lake trout from frigid water, 25 fathoms deep.
"There's fish blood on [the puller]," Goldsworthy said. "It's officially a work boat now."
He said the 31-foot craft was custom-made to be safe, agile and comfortable. Marine engineers at Lake Assault Boats hit the mark, he said.
While Goldsworthy talked, Chris Palvere maneuvered the boat over a rolling 4-foot sea to get in line with another fish net. Water from high waves sprayed and then pounded against the boat's windshield. It ran off the vessel as quickly as it arrived.
"It's our little version of 'Deadliest Catch,' " said Palvere, Blackfin's primary captain.