Autumn pulls most anglers to shore.
Yet some repel this magnet and continue to be drawn to open water through October, November and even December when possible.
"Autumn fishing is like last call," said Josh Stevenson, a Twin Cities-based muskie fishing guide. "You fill up because you know the end is near."
Stevenson, owner of Blue Ribbon Bait and Tackle in Oakdale, will pull his boat to the St. Croix River and metro lakes until ice locks up the landings. He does so because "late autumn is pretty much the best time of year," he said, and a favorite memory time, too.
"I'll never forget one late season muskie trip. It was 34 degrees. I was dressed like I was ice fishing. I tried something contrary to all wisdom, which was to put on a surface lure and fish the shallows. No one would expect a muskie to be in 3 feet of water that time of year let alone slam a Top Raider, yet that's exactly what a 49-incher did. It was supercool."
Stevenson's late-season fishing obsession afflicts others, too. Among them is Bob Maas, who lives in Morgan Park, a storied steel industry neighborhood on the edge of Duluth. Mass fishes the St. Louis River virtually every day. Doctors' orders can hardly anchor him to shore.
"I fish until I can't break the ice anymore," said the jovial 73-year-old. "That's when I finally put the boat away."
Mass is looking forward to more fall fishing, in part, because a new pacemaker has added zip to his life. "People often wish me luck when I go fishing but luck has little to do with it," Maas said. "There's a knack to catching fish, and it comes from practice, practice, practice."