Pick a year. Any year.
When John Wetrosky worked the counter at Koep's Nisswa Bait and Tackle from 1971 to 1978, every Minnesota fishing opener knocked him out.
The joyful stampede of walleye anglers veered off Hwy. 371 toward the can't-miss shop starting at midweek. Then, at 6 a.m. Friday, the trickle would turn into a torrent as the doors opened for two days of round-the-clock sales. Hour after hour, customers jammed the aisles to pick out supplies. They waited in line at the minnow tanks and again at the checkout lane. So rabid were people to go fishing and get away, some buyers would hand over their cash and exit without their change, Wetrosky said.
"It was a crossroads like no other," he said. "The cash registers were hot."
Wetrosky, of Pine River, and Brainerd area fishing guide Royal Karels recently reminisced about a time and place in the history of Minnesota fishing openers when a mom-and-pop bait shop could draw celebrities, ring upward of $10,000 a day, showcase leading-edge technology, corral the state's finest fishing guides, and hire a clown to untangle parking lot snarls.
"The adrenaline was flowing," Wetrosky said. "Everyone was done with winter and excited to get outside and do something."
Said Karels: "It was crazy. There were just tons of people."
The two men had front row seats for a bygone era of May Madness fostered by Marv and Judy Koep. Each year, the couple prepared weeks in advance of Opening Day. The high-flying retail destination provided an impressive selection of live bait, the latest must-have walleye lures, motor rentals, repairs, how-to lessons for the breakthrough Lowrance Green Box Fish Lo-K-Tor, and a very large, signature supply of glazed doughnuts.