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A time of upbeat fishing on Upper Red Lake

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Zapping a small "glow'' spoon with high-intensity light helps walleyes see the minnow-baited lure in Upper Red Lake's tainted water. (Photo by Dennis Anderson/Minneapolis Star Tribune/MCT)

(MCT) — ON UPPER RED LAKE — Little that I know about psychology, I believe ice fishing is better for what ails you than a frontal lobotomy. I mention this also not knowing much about frontal lobotomies, except for the old joke that argues, “I’d rather have a bottle in front of me than a frontal lobotomy.”

But perhaps I’m off topic. The point is that time on the ice is time well spent. Granted, this is a peculiarly regional form of recreation, and its beneficial effects, say, on Southerners has not yet been confirmed. It’s quite possible a mutant gene brought over from one of the Old Countries and plopped down somewhere along the North Shore by an émigré who landed here generations ago as a bachelor and remained so except for a one-night stand at a roadhouse somewhere near the present-day site of the small town of Cotton, or perhaps farther north, near Buyck, was the start of it all.

Of course, all of this carries with it an asterisk of speculation. No one really knows why ice fishing is so popular in Minnesota. Or so relaxing.

It just is.

I was reassured of this on a Wednesday morning when I creaked open the door to the fish house that my son, Trevor, and I had rented on Upper Red. The wind had blown all night, carrying snow sideways, a real killer blizzard that suggested the frailty of all life.

Maybe 100 yards away was another shack, and for the first time in 12 hours I dared venture that distance without risking inclusion in a Department of Natural Resources highlight reel of winter casualties. Had I found within it Ole and Sven themselves, frozen stiff, peering into icy cylinders, a half-empty bottle of Yukon Jack between them as testament to what was important in their final hours, I wouldn’t have been surprised.

Instead, alive and well thereabouts were Paul and Tammy Pfannenstein, four days on the ice and happy as larks. They and their friends, they reported, inhabited all of the shacks in the area, each a member of, or related to a member of, the Smok’n Guns, a St. Cloud country-music band.

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