Minnesota
NEXT Weather: Potential for major snow event next week

MINNEAPOLIS – The weekend will convey above-average temperatures as soon as once more, although additionally extra clouds than we have gotten used to seeing of late.
That being mentioned, subsequent week brings with it the prospect for our subsequent large snow occasion in components of Minnesota.
WCCO meteorologist Joseph Dames says highs will push close to 40 Saturday, and certain as much as the mid-30s Sunday. However subsequent week will present one other reminder that we’re certainly in February, with highs dropping again down into the 20s.
Dames says our first snow probability of the week will arrive Monday. This can primarily influence these to the north, however half an inch is feasible within the Twin Cities.
“The extra vital system will come to point out up late Tuesday,” Dames mentioned.
The influence could be on the midweek, Dames provides, so WCCO’s NEXT Climate group is issuing attainable NEXT Climate Alert days for each Wednesday and Thursday.
Gentle snow would arrive Tuesday night time, turning into extra of an occasion come Wednesday and Thursday.
“If every thing continues to go as deliberate, the heaviest snow on Wednesday night time and Thursday. There will likely be moments of blowing snow as nicely, making journey tough,” Dames mentioned. “This may increasingly herald sufficient snow for the month.”
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Minnesota
Remer, the ‘Home of Bigfoot,’ draws thousands of believers and curiosity-seekers to festival

“We’re very self-disciplined [and] keep the facts straight,” he said.
In 2009, Tim Kedrowski’s trail camera on his family’s hunting land in Remer captured a blurry image of a towering, dark figure with long arms. The image made headlines worldwide.
Some thought it was a hoax, but Kedrowski contacted the MN.B.R.T. to confirm it was a bigfoot.
Kedrowski, who died last year, wasn’t a bigfoot believer, said son Casey Kedrowski of Rice, Minn. But without the trail camera image, he said, Remer couldn’t lay claim to bigfoot like the way it does today.
Ruyak trademarked Remer as the Home of Bigfoot, a designation he said was solidified after the reputed 2009 sighting. He has studied local reports of alleged bigfoot sightings dating back to the early 1900s, when town founder William P. Remer discovered massive footprints.
Minnesota
Dokken: Walleyes might be prized in Minnesota and North Dakota, but not in this Idaho lake

Now here’s something you’ll never see in Minnesota or North Dakota.
I came across a story from the Idaho Statesman newspaper the other day about a walleye “invasion” in Lake Lowell, a southwestern Idaho lake known for its largemouth bass fishing.
As a result of the unwanted influx, Idaho’s Fish and Game department is asking anglers to have at it with the walleyes, the Idaho Statesman reported. No limits; instead, anglers should “catch, kill and keep” every walleye they catch.
The fish apparently were illegally introduced by a fisherman in 2022, the Statesman reported, and may “be competing and taking food from largemouth bass.” The population has “advanced quickly” since 2022, fisheries biologist Art Butts told the newspaper.
“Idaho and walleye just aren’t a good match in most places,” the newspaper said, citing a news release from Idaho Fish and Game.
“Just because there’s places in the Midwest that do really good with walleye, and they haven’t impacted largemouth bass … that doesn’t mean that they’re not going to have an impact here,” Butts told the Statesman.
Given the mindset of many anglers in Minnesota and North Dakota, where “if it’s not a walleye, it’s not a fish” is a common perception, it might be hard to grasp the concept of walleyes being an undesirable species.
But just like any invasive species, walleyes can have a big-time impact on the ecology of lakes and rivers where they don’t belong. And once the genie’s out of the bottle, so to speak, reversing the impact is difficult, if not impossible.
That’s no different than any other invasive species, whether it’s zebra mussels or jumping carp.
As the Statesman reported, Idaho’s Fish and Game is encouraging anglers to target walleyes, even though it probably won’t fix the problem.
As the old saying goes: When life gives you lemons, make lemonade.
“We know that angling by itself is probably not going to do much for the population,” Butts says in the article. “Walleye are considered one of the best-eating fish in freshwater, and so while we’ve got this problem, let’s get the word out to folks that might be interested in fishing for them.
“Here’s a place where you … have a good opportunity to do that.”
This isn’t the first time fisheries managers have raised the alarm about walleyes, of course. The Columbia River has long had a population of unwanted walleyes, to the detriment of native salmon species, and now has a reputation as a trophy walleye fishery. As with Lake Lowell in Idaho, there’s no size or bag limit on walleyes in the Columbia River.
There have been other instances of unwanted game fish species, as well, and not just walleyes. According to the National Park Service, non-native lake trout were discovered in Wyoming’s Yellowstone Lake in 1994. Since then, millions of lake trout have been removed from Yellowstone Lake through gillnetting, in an effort to lower the population and lessen the negative impact on native cutthroat trout. Other techniques, such as spreading plant-based pellets over lake trout spawning sites to suffocate the eggs,
also are being explored, the NPS said.
Lake trout are probably my favorite fish to catch, and walleyes are right up there. Just goes to show, I guess – one angler’s prize is another angler’s problem.
I’ve said it before, and I’ll probably say it again:
There’s something about watching a bobber that just never gets old.
I thought about that again last weekend, when I got the chance to spend a few hours walleye fishing on Devils Lake.
My fishing partners had been over there a few days already and had done well dunking leeches below slip bobbers in about 15 feet of water, give or take, the previous two mornings. Eater-size fish, mostly, with their biggest stretching the tape at 19½ inches.
That fish went back in the lake to hopefully make more anglers’ bobbers sink sometime down the road.
Expecting a spot to produce walleyes three days in a row might be a stretch, especially in a location as small as this particular area, but we decided to give it a few hours anyway.
Boat traffic certainly wouldn’t be a problem. Even though it was a holiday weekend, I was struck by how quiet the lake was – at least in the area where we were fishing. We didn’t see more than a handful of boats the whole time.
Not that I’m complaining, mind you.
The action was considerably slower than what my fishing partners had experienced the previous two days – just my luck – but we still managed to put three eaters in the box during our short time on the water.
I had the pleasure of watching my bobber sink to a 17-inch walleye.
I’ll take fish like that any day of the week. And if getting to watch a bobber sink is part of the deal, all the better.
Minnesota
What does the closure of beloved restaurants and music stores mean for small business in Minnesota?
“Running a small business is a special kind of challenge, and like any business, while there are good days and bad days, good months and bad months, a bakery is a particular type of physical challenge,” the post read. “We understand that this may shock and sadden many of our fans, but we also know that we have been blessed with an incredibly supportive, caring customer base who will recognize the people behind the treats, and for that, and so much more, we enter these final weeks with immense gratitude.”
Palmer’s Bar patrons, who go by the names “R.D.” and “C,” shake hands before parting ways outside the legendary Minneapolis dive bar, which will close permanently in September. (Aaron Lavinsky/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
The owners of Palmer’s, a Minneapolis dive bar that was hailed as one of the best in America, said a national trend in declining alcohol sales led to the “incredibly difficult but necessary decision” to shutter the 119-year-old business on Sept. 14.
Those declining sales and challenges from losing nearby businesses drained between $10,000 and $30,000 a month from the bar’s coffers, according to the owners, but a neighbor plans to buy the the building for a community space.
The Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development (DEED) reports that small businesses, which are defined as companies that employ fewer than 500 people, make up 99.5% of all businesses in the state.
But between March 2023 and March 2024, at least 16,029 businesses opened as 21,448 closed, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration.
Still, Mary Haugen with DEED said small businesses tend to survive in Minnesota, citing state data which shows more than half of the businesses formed in 2019 remained open in 2024. But rising costs can prompt landlords to increase their lease and force businesses to close up shop.
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