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NEW ARTICLE FROM OUTDOOR WEEKLY
'Don’t you like the smell of walleye in the
morning?'
Pawlenty’s fishing
weekend cut short, but weather steals the show
at
Gov. Tim Pawlenty
had to leave early Saturday at the 2010
Minnesota Governor’s Fishing Opener on
“It was fabulous,” Pawlenty told The Journal when asked about Saturday’s weather. In an event
that annually gets punished by Mother Nature
(and Mother’s Day), Saturday’s “You all
saved the best for last,” said First Lady Mary
Pawlenty, speaking for her husband Saturday Gov.
Pawlenty left Kabetogama around 1 p.m. Saturday
to return to the Capitol. “I advocated strongly for him to stay, but duty calls,” the First Lady said. Before the
governor departed, however, he was able reel in
four fish, including a 22 1/2-inch walleye. “No. 1,
politics aside, they’re just great people,” said
Tim Watson, the community The First
Lady landed a northern pike while fishing with
friends in the afternoon, “We had a great time,” Molnau said at the celebration dinner. The annual
competitive banter between Gov. Pawlenty and
Molnau was missed at the dinner, but “There’s memories all over,” Molnau said. “ ... And you guys gave them to us.” Harlan and Heidi Schauer, the co-chairs of the event, both sported wide smiles Saturday evening after the dinner. “It was just a great weekend. It really was,” Heidi said. “Everyone will take away memories and great fish stories.” And sunburn. While photos
from the 2006 GFO on Rainy Lake in International
Falls featured winter coats stocking caps, and
last year’s “I remember
that 2006 one, cause it was so darn cold. You
can’t ask for anything better here,” said Doug
Grindall Koochiching There wasn’t
a cloud in the sky at one point before lunch,
and calm winds in the afternoon added to
Kabetogama’s mystique. “I can’t
think of an opener where we came out with
sunburn,” said Minnesota Department of Natural
Resources Commissioner
Watson, 63,
fished in his first opener at 12 years old, and
he would put Saturday’s weather up “We’ve broken ice. We’ve fished in snow storms, wind blowing. We always did it,” he said. Maj. Troy
Fink was one of 10 National Guard members to
accept an invite this year from the governor,
and he couldn’t get to “It’s beautiful up here. It’s awesome,” Fink said. Before
leaving for duty in Iraq in 2004, Fink, of the
1st Battalion, 151st Field Artillery based in
Montevideo, asked Gov. Pawlenty “It’s kind of a neat deal to get invited to come up,” Fink said. “It’s a treat after getting deployed for a year.” The National Guard was much appreciated, receiving two standing ovations at the celebration dinner. Many thought Kabetogama should receive a standing ovation, as well.
Participating in his eighth GFO, Minnesota
Supreme Court Chief Justice Eric Magnuson noted
the biggest difference between “And you know what? It was a good call,” he said. Magnuson,
who admitted the 2006 GFO on Rainy Lake was his
favorite, caught a “fair amount” of fish and his
26-inch walleye Blake
Johnson, co-chair of the Park Rapids Lake Area
Chamber of Commerce attempting to bring the GFO
to his community “They did a
great job. This is first class,” he said, noting
his party caught over a dozen fish. And would he come back to visit? “I’d come back to fish. It’s a good lake,” he said. It was a wide-spread opinion. “These people are awesome,” Fink said. “And it all seems genuine.”
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