LAKE WINNIBIGOSHISH -- That a winter business, and a good one, could be built around perch -- perch! -- only underscores what a great country this is.
Twenty-eight miles of icy road is what resort owner Rick Leonhardt plows every other day or so for fishermen who often drive hundreds of miles to fish for perch on this giant northern Minnesota lake.
Thursday afternoon, a bitter northwest wind swirled across Winnie's snow-packed surface as Leonhardt and I bounced across the frozen lake in his Jeep about 6 miles from High Banks Resort, which he and his wife, Kim, own.
Downshifting, then stomping on the accelerator, Leonhardt angled us yonder farther still, toward where the blue sky met the white lake, with a sliver of distant shoreline sandwiched between.
Behind us in his pickup was Department of Natural Resources large lake specialist Gerry Albert of Grand Rapids, Minn. An avid angler, summer and winter, Albert is on Winnie regularly, usually for work, sometimes for play.
We were using a handheld global positioning system to guide us to a spot suspected to harbor perch. Nearby were other anglers, most from Wisconsin, a state that breeds perch lovers and Packer lovers in nearly equal number.
"A lot of our guests are from Wisconsin," Leonhardt said. "They love their perch, and they'll drive a long way to fish for them."
Winnie, of course, has other fish. It's a haven for walleyes, and the northern pike population is good. But those species receive scant attention in the cold months, when small jigs are baited with minnows and dropped to the bottom.