ON UPPER RED LAKE – Opening day was different this year on this walleye wonderland of a lake, but the difference wasn't in the number of anglers who showed up eager to bait a hook with a minnow.
By all accounts, the flotilla of aluminum and fiberglass watercraft carrying bundled-up fishing hopefuls seemed every bit as large Saturday when Minnesota's inland-waters season opened for walleyes and northern pike as it did a year ago.
The Department of Natural Resources and Gov. Tim Walz had encouraged anglers to stay fairly close to their homes Saturday, suggesting that destinations within a tankful of gas, return trips included, should be the outer limits of opening-day travels.
The request seemed odd to many. The governor's goal, ultimately, given the coronavirus threat, is to encourage Minnesotans to space themselves out, even while on a dock, or in a boat, fishing.
Yet the largest aggregation of the state's 1 million-plus anglers lives in the seven-county metro area, and having them all gather on piers and at boat launches in and near the Twin Cities seemed to many to be counterintuitive.
In addition, Minnesota is a walleye state, and its people almost preternaturally walleye anglers. And most of the state's best walleye lakes are Up North. So perhaps it was to be expected on this opener, coronavirus or no coronavirus, that many Minnesota anglers would gather where the walleyes are.
Proof of which could be found Saturday in this number: 288.
That's how many pickup-boat-and-trailer rigs were parked near and not so near to the public landing at Big Bog State Recreation Area on the shores of Upper Red Lake.