GARRISON, Minn. — You hear it all the time about Mille Lacs: if you go there in November before the water turns to ice, the fish gods reward you with big walleyes. Muskies, too.
We put those tantalizing tales to the test late last week, confirming that the big lake gives up great, golden walleyes after Halloween.
"It feels like we're stealing time," Scott Ward of Inver Grove Heights said as he positioned his 19-foot fishing boat in Garrison Bay for another troll.
He delayed winterizing the boat's outboard motor this fall, then launched it into Mille Lacs last Friday as hundreds of thousands of other Minnesotans prepped for the statewide deer hunting opener. The two of us spent a couple of hours in the morning looking for our first bite but ultimately laid into a hungry school of fish in 15 feet of water, a little less than a mile from shore.
Cutting to the chase, we landed six walleyes trolling spinners tipped with medium-sized sucker minnows. The smallest fish was a plump 18-incher and the largest was 22 3⁄4 inches — a keeper. Scott also caught a chunky 28-inch northern pike.
"I love it when a plan comes together!" he said.
No trip to Mille Lacs is complete without banter about the fishery and how it's being managed by the Department of Natural Resources. According to DNR regional fisheries manager Brian Nerbonne, here's what's new:
For the first time under the state's co-management agreement with eight Ojibwe bands that retain fishing rights on Mille Lacs, the DNR this year set triggers giving the agency the ability to loosen in-season harvest regulations with greater speed.