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Patrolling the Rainy River all in a day's work for DNR conservation officers

Apr 15, 2019 06:16AM ● By Editor
Hannah Mishler, a conservation officer for the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, visits with Wyatt Casavan (from left) of Red Lake Falls, Minn., Cameron Dahedl of Bemidji and Kevin Longtin (partially obscured, far right) of Grand Forks on Friday, April 5 during a check of anglers fishing the Rainy River near Clementson, Minn. Longtin had just landed a 59.5-inch sturgeon that's partially visible in the bottom of the boat. Photo/ Brad Dokken, Grand Forks Herald

By Brad Dokken of the Grand Forks Herald - April 15, 2019

CLEMENTSON, Minn.—It's a gray, dreary morning, and mist spits through the lingering fog, but that doesn't keep anglers by the hundreds from converging on the Rainy River on this Friday in early April.

Vehicle-boat trailer rigs line both sides of the road for several hundred yards from the Vidas Access boat ramp south nearly to Minnesota Highway 11 on the border of Koochiching and Lake of the Woods counties.

The Rainy River is open, and anglers from across the region are getting their first taste of fishing in a boat after a long winter. Occasional remnants of ice float downstream through the fleet of boats, and snow lingers on both the U.S. and Canadian shorelines of the border river.

As they are many days throughout the spring walleye season, Hannah Mishler and Eric Benjamin are patrolling the river, making the rounds in a 19-foot Alumacraft powered by a 200-horse Honda outboard. Wishing they were fishing, perhaps, but more importantly, making sure anglers play by the rules. Conservation officers for the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, Mishler and Benjamin say they also welcome the return to open water after a long winter, even if they're not wetting lines.

"It's a nice change of pace," Benjamin said. "It's like all of our seasons. You look forward to them, but by the time they're done, you're tired of them.

"That's kind of the beauty of the job."

Mishler, of Kelliher, Minn., works the Baudette East station, an area that includes Upper Red Lake and parts of Lake of the Woods and Rainy River. Benjamin, of Roosevelt, Minn., has the Warroad North area, which includes parts of Lake of the Woods and Beltrami Island State Forest.

Both have been in their work areas for the past five years and graduated from the same conservation officer academy. Originally from the Ely, Minn., area, Mishler graduated from St. Cloud State University with a criminal justice degree before entering the academy. Benjamin, a Farmington, Minn., native, worked as a deputy in Anoka County before becoming a conservation officer.

A love for being outside drew them to the field, they say.

"I grew up literally in the middle of nowhere—no running water, no electricity," Mishler said. "I always had a passion for wanting to protect the resources just because I grew up using them so much."

The variety also is part of the attraction, Benjamin says; no two days are the same.

"You're outdoors, you're kind of free to do what you need to do, and every day is something new," he said.

Working the river

Mishler and Benjamin are among the team of DNR conservation officers who work spring walleye and sturgeon fishing on the Rainy River. The spring walleye season closes Sunday, April 14, and the focus will turn to sturgeon fishing, which is catch-and-release only through April 23, with a limited harvest season beginning April 24 and continuing through May 7.

Sturgeon fishing returns to catch-and-release only from May 8 through May 15; season is closed from May 16 through June 30.

Despite the crowds, which Mishler says are even bigger on the weekends, there's a laid-back atmosphere among the anglers trying their luck on this cloudy Friday. The Rainy River has a justified reputation for trophy walleyes and action that can border on spectacular, but fishing generally is slow.

It's a familiar refrain for Mishler and Benjamin as they motor among the boats congregated along several miles of river.

"Hi guys, how's it going?" Mishler asks as they pull up to a boat occupied by Paul Austin of Barnesville, Minn.; Ryan Teiken of Devils Lake; and Kris Nissen of Aitkin, Minn.

"Quiet—only two fish so far," is the reply. After a livewell check and quick look at licenses, life jackets and other safety equipment, the officers wish the trio luck and continue on their way.

"You can't catch fish if you're not out here, so you're halfway there right now," she says to another group of anglers in a nearby boat having similar luck.

They don't check every boat, instead watching for obvious violations such as expired boat registrations, fishing with too many lines or just stopping to chat and exchange greetings with anglers.

It's not all about trying to write as many tickets as they can, in other words.

Still, Benjamin says, they do occasionally run across behavior that warrants a closer look.

"The ones that are worried will pull anchor and try to move out—those are the ones" to watch, he said. "When you get in a group and nobody moves, those are legit."


To read more of the original story, see more photos and watch a video and read related outdoors reporting, follow this link to The Grand Forks Herald. https://www.grandforksherald.com/sports/outdoors/4597238-video-patrolling-rainy-river-all-days-work-...


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