‘Sturgeon King’ lives up to his ‘never not fishing’ motto on Rainy River

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BAUDETTE, Minn. – It was another smoky day in the border country, but on this early August afternoon, the haze above didn’t matter – the focus lurked somewhere beneath the surface of the Rainy River.

For Kevin Hinrichs of Baudette and two 13-year-olds – son Jeffrey and nephew Alex Vadner, who was visiting from Wanamingo, Minn. – the plan was both simple and relaxing: Drop anchor, spend a few hours on the river and soak some bait in hopes of enticing a lake sturgeon or two into biting.

In between, there’d be ample opportunity to shoot the breeze, ponder the meaning of life and burn through nightcrawlers and frozen shiners while catching a mixed bag of fish that might include walleyes, saugers, redhorse, mooneyes and suckers.

This time of year on the Rainy River, you never know what you’re going to catch. Such is life when you run a sturgeon camp and target the underwater giants at every opportunity, whether for fun with a couple of avid 13-year-olds, or as a border country sturgeon guide.

“Never not fishing” is Hinrichs’ motto and it’s not an exaggeration. He calls his 24-foot pontoon the “Warship,” saying that doing battle with a big sturgeon is like a war.

That’s not an exaggeration, either.

Moving north

Hinrichs and his wife, Jennifer, bought the Royal Dutchman Resort on the Rainy River east of Baudette in October 2020 in the teeth of the COVID-19 pandemic.

They’d looked at several cabins over the years in the border country, thinking they’d move north and find jobs, Hinrichs recalls, but found nothing to their liking until they looked at the Royal Dutchman.

So it was that Hinrichs left his job managing a rock pit – he drove a payloader, loaded semis and dump trucks – and moved the family north from Zumbrota, Minn.

“We didn’t think – that was the biggest thing,” Hinrichs said. “We saw it. We liked it. We decided to buy it. I’ll tell you this – of the people who would have cold feet, I was the one who was like, ‘Are we sure this is what we want to do?’ My wife was the one who said, ‘Yes, this is what we’re going to do.’”

And so he became “The Dutchman” and she became “The Duchess.” In addition to son Jeff, they have a daughter, Vera, who’ll be 15 in September.

“If the world was going to be coming to an end (because of COVID), I might as well be rocking a resort,” Hinrichs said. “And it turned out, as we see, the world didn’t end. And actually, business that first year was probably the best that we ever had.”

The Sturgeon King reign begins

Given its location on the Rainy River, the Royal Dutchman historically attracted sturgeon anglers – especially in the spring and fall, when the biggest fish are caught – but previous owners didn’t market the place as a “sturgeon resort,” Hinrichs says.

Kevin Hinrichs — aka “The Dutchman” — of Baudette, Minn., calls his 24-foot pontoon boat the “Dutchman’s Warship.” It’s a fitting name, Hinrichs says, because tangling with a big Rainy River sturgeon can be a real war. Hinrichs, who lays claim to the unofficial title of “Sturgeon King,” spends a lot of time guiding and fishing for the prehistoric fish. (Brad Dokken / Forum News Service)

As new owners, Hinrichs and his wife decided to change that.

“Being a new guy, a new kid on the block, I saw it as an opportunity,” he said. “I actually talked to a guy that I met up here, and he’s like, there is no Sturgeon King – everybody’s all walleye, walleye, walleye, walleye – and he says, ‘You could be that guy.’

“I sat and I looked at our location and where we were and how we could operate, and I thought – you know what, he’s right, I am going to be the Sturgeon King.”

Before buying the resort, Hinrichs says, the only sturgeon he’d ever caught was a small one he pulled through the ice on Lake Pepin in southeast Minnesota.

“I had a lot of fishing to do to get the credibility that it takes to be amongst the crowd, so that’s what I do,” Hinrichs said. “When I say ‘Never not fishing,’ I mean it.”

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His posts on the Royal Dutchman Resort Facebook page – part fishing report, part Northwoods philosophy – also have attracted a following. Hinrichs often ends his posts with, “For those about to fish, we salute you,” a tribute to the 1981 album “For Those About to Rock (We Salute You)” by AC/DC, one of his favorite bands.

People fishing with him have caught sturgeon over 70 inches during the prime spring months.

“The memories that you make – that is what catching sturgeon is really about,” Hinrichs said. “Most often, I’m part of a life-lasting memory that you’re never going to forget because it’s often going to be the biggest fish you’re ever going to catch in your life.”

Summer sturgeon

Sturgeon fishing generally isn’t a numbers game, and the fish that come onboard the Warship in the summer tend to run smaller than the behemoths that cruise the river in the spring to spawn in the Rainy and its tributaries.

Kevin Hinrichs nets a small sturgeon for his son, Jeffrey, on Friday, Aug. 1, 2025, during a few hours of fishing on the Rainy River near Baudette, Minn. (Brad Dokken / Forum News Service)

Having a gift for gab definitely helps pass the time between bites, Hinrichs says.

“The reality of sturgeon fishing when you become a sturgeon guide, you realize that you have to have good people skills because it’s a lot of sitting around and waiting,” Hinrichs said. “If you can’t keep the morale and the attitude up there, people are going to want to leave. They’re going to want to go, ‘Let’s just call it a day, they’re not biting.’ When you know at some point in your mind, they’re going to open up and bite if I can keep them in my boat long enough.”

Summer tends to be the season of the “keeper” sturgeon, Hinrichs says, those 45- to 50-inch fish (or over 75 inches) the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources allows anglers to keep during limited harvest seasons in the spring and fall if they buy a special $5 tag.

The harvest limit is one per calendar year.

“Everybody thinks sturgeon are only here in the river in the spring, and they’re very mistaken,” Hinrichs said. “I’ve had (summer) trips where we’ve gone out and caught five or six fish over 55 inches, with a 69¾-incher topping the list as the big one.”

Typically, Hinrichs averages five to 15 sturgeon trips a month in the summer – it runs in spurts, he says – though he did “48 or 50 trips” in 45 days earlier this year between six-hour morning and evening excursions.

“I stacked a lot of trips in a short little bit of time,” he said.

Walleyes, of course, are a draw in the spring and again in the fall, but “the tug is the drug” when it comes to sturgeon fishing, Hinrichs says.

“I always tell people the sturgeon is something that when you hook up, it’s something that you can’t explain – it can only be felt,” he said. “Even that 50-inch fish, you think you’ve got the biggest, baddest fish of your life on (the line), which you do. As far as freshwater fish in the United States of America, you’re not going to fight a much badder fish when it comes to the fight, than a sturgeon.”

Enjoyable evening

There’d be no big sturgeon – the true “dinos,” as Hinrichs calls them – brought to the Warship on this hazy August afternoon, but a number of large fish jumped nearby, as if taunting us. Chris Dickerson of Boone, Miss., who was staying at the resort, landed a 59-incher at dusk within view of camp as Hinrichs steered the Warship back to the dock.

Chris Dickerson of Boone, Miss., landed this 59-inch sturgeon Friday evening, Aug. 1, 2025, on the Rainy River east of Baudette, Minn., within view of the Royal Dutchman Resort. Kevin Hinrichs, owner of the Royal Dutchman Resort, was fishing nearby in the 24-foot pontoon he calls the “Warship” when Dickerson tied into the fish. (Courtesy photo via Forum News Service)

Jeff Hinrichs and Alex Vadner, the 13-year-olds onboard, reeled in enough walleyes and saugers for a fish fry back at camp, along with several redhorse, a common sucker and a half-dozen “razor blades,” small sturgeon so-called for their sharp scutes, the bony plates that protect their skin.

With some coaching from the Dutchman, Vadner – reluctant at first – even held a sturgeon for a photo; the smile on his face was almost as big as the fish.

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We’d go through 5 dozen nightcrawlers, and if the boys’ enthusiasm was any indication – they didn’t want to go in – the future of fishing is in good hands.

Fun was had, memories were made.

So it went during a fine few hours on the Rainy River.

“You don’t lack for action (in the summer),” Hinrichs said. “And you never know. You’re going to catch a variety of fish. Definitely a little taste of the exotic that Lake of the Woods and Rainy River has to offer, with a multitude of fish that you can catch.”

Bill Dudley: The Fed’s under siege. It’ll be just fine

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In the media, the U.S. Federal Reserve is under siege. President Donald Trump constantly threatens to fire Chair Jerome Powell. Others hurl criticism in hopes of becoming Powell’s successor. Two Fed governors opposed last week’s decision to hold interest rates steady, the first multiple dissent since 1993.

Don’t be fooled by the drama. In terms of how the Fed manages the economy, it’s mostly a tempest in a teapot.

Trump has very little leverage over Powell. The Supreme Court has confirmed that the chair can’t be dismissed except “for cause” — a threshold that the renovation-cost overruns the president has cited don’t meet. Powell intends to serve out his term to May 2026 and possibly stay on further as a governor. He, not Trump, is in control of the Fed.

Whoever succeeds Powell might not obey Trump once in office. If pressed to lower interest rates in clear breach of the Fed’s mandate, the chair might refuse — and in any case would have to convince the policy-making committee. Trump probably can’t stack the FOMC: I’d be surprised if he gets the opportunity to appoint more than two or three members during this presidential term.

The double dissent from governors Michelle Bowman and Christopher Waller exaggerate the split within the Fed. All 19 members of the policy-making Federal Open Market Committee expect to cut interest rates over the next few years, according to their own economic projections from June. They differ only on timing and magnitude. The dissents should be discounted, given the “coincidence” that they’re from the only two Trump-appointed members.

The Fed chair’s sway over the FOMC is subtle and multi-faceted. The chair sets meeting agendas, chooses the topics (but not the conclusions) of the special staff analyses considered at meetings, sets committee assignments for the Federal Reserve Board and controls the Board’s staff resources. When monetary policy differences are modest, members have ample reason to stay on the chair’s good side. The more expertise and credibility the chair has, the more they’ll be willing to defer. During the dotcom boom of the 1990s, for example, they abided by Chairman Alan Greenspan’s judgment that productivity growth would keep inflation in check, because they trusted in his experience as an economic forecaster.

FOMC voters typically do not dissent over differences of timing and magnitude when they agree with the broad direction of monetary policy. More than one or two dissents tends to indicate significant disagreement and can threaten the chair’s influence both within the committee and beyond. Rarely would a Fed chair try to force a decision when strongly opposed by more than 2 or 3 members — though this depends on the motivations of the dissenters. I see last week’s dual dissents, for example, as a special case reflecting Waller’s desire to succeed Powell and Bowman’s “thank you” to Trump for appointing her as the Fed’s vice chair for supervision. I doubt they’ve diminished Powell’s standing.

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I’ve been amply critical of the Fed — for its flawed 2020 monetary policy framework and for failing to properly consider the costs and benefits of quantitative easing, among other things. But I think the attacks from Powell’s potential successors go too far.

Accusations of mission creep overstate the evidence: The Fed’s climate change policy, for example, has remained entirely within its core financial-stability mission, focusing on how natural disasters might precipitate property losses and strand assets. The notion of “breaking some heads” to achieve “regime change” is downright mean-spirited, given the commitment of Fed officials and staff to do whatever is needed in terms of time, effort, and creativity to achieve the central bank’s objectives (a commitment that I witnessed as president of the New York Fed).

The Fed’s achievements in stabilizing markets during the 2008 financial crisis and the Covid pandemic, and in bringing down inflation while avoiding recession in recent years, deserve praise rather than disparagement. It’ll take a lot more than the latest wave of attacks to undermine the independence crucial to that record.

Bill Dudley is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. A former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, he is a nonexecutive director at Swiss Bank UBS and a member of Coinbase Global’s advisory council.

Letters: Reassuring to see work in St. Paul toward understanding our common humanity

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The work to understand our common humanity

I wish to comment on the well written letter from JoAnn Blatchley of the St  Paul-Nagasaki Sister City Committee. I found myself reflecting on my 40-year experience at the Minneapolis VA Medical Center as a therapist to World War II veterans in the Mental Health Section. I believe there are very few of us (veterans or therapists) left. When one reads news articles from that wartime period it is always in terms of “Japs or Nips” often followed by picture cartoons of Japanese with ugly faces, buck teeth and bayonets. There was  seldom a sense of humanity. It would  have been very difficult to describe their humanity when one considers their history in China, Korea, the Phillipines or any other  location they invaded. Just this last week i shared my experiences of American POWs of the Japanese with a group i meet with regularly and their belief that they would all expect to die at the hands of the Japanese, but their main hope was to have a “peaceful death” and, for instance, did not want to be burned to death.

There are so many ethical, racial and moral questions. In the past my family hosted two groups of Japanese students who spent part of their summer at St. Kate’s, and i think we all found this rewarding.

My unanswered question is not did the Japanese “deserve” the bombing, but rather, with the history we now have, “could we have ended the war without an even greater loss of life without the A bomb?” Just months before the end of the War, almost the entire garrison of 22,000 Japanese on Iwo Jima refused to surrender and went to their deaths presumably still of the belief that their Emperor was some type of god. That belief is very hard to change.

So it is reassuring to learn that there are groups in both countries that work for peace and common understanding of our humanity.

Mike Greeman, Woodbury

 

Pants on fire

In Sunday’s Pioneer Press there appeared an editorial from the Las Vegas Review Journal repeating certain Republican talking points about the effort led by Pete Buttigieg and the Biden administration to jumpstart the creation of EV charging stations across the country. The assertion is that billions have been spent on a handful of charging stations. A quick internet search puts the lie to this fable: The money was allocated to the states, which were in the process of creating the stations. The effort was just getting started, and the money expenditures were just beginning. The assertion of bureaucratic waste and inefficiency is a pants-on-fire lie. The readers of the Pioneer Press deserve better from Minnesota’s oldest newspaper.

James Watson, Maplewood

 

Build it, then deal with the problems

Nothing refutes Mohammad Hosseini’s demand for “ethics” and regulations on AI to protect “children, neurodivergent individuals and minorities” than the first paragraph of the EV charger debacle article on the facing page of the paper. It reports that $7.5 billion (yes billion) dollars were spent to build 68 EV chargers. All because of the progressive woke nonsense demanded by the infrastructure act.

Mr. Hosseini would require that we build a whole web of regulations and “ethics” protections around the development of AI. They would do nothing but impede or even strangle the development of AI. Let’s build world-class AI, then see what problems develop and what actions need to be taken to protect people.

William Conway, Vadnais Heights

 

Wrong state

Utah State Senate President Stuart Adams prompted a change in the age-of-consent law after one of his relatives was charged with having sex with a 13-year-old girl. It appears Jeffry Epstein and his circle of friends’ only mistake was operating in the wrong state.

Joe Danko, North St. Paul

 

Bite the bullet on Social Security

George Will’s take on what could happen to Social Security and its ramifications to our economy is what could happen if Social Security is not fixed now. To fix it we have to do many things, a few being raise the age of retirement, raise the amount that the employer and employee contribute. Raise the cap on income that is not now subject to Social Security payments. Means-test benefits. If you have an income over $200,000 per year in retirement you do not need it. Except for spouses, if you have not paid in you get nothing back.

This of course will make everyone angry as it will have an impact on everyone. But lawmakers and citizens should bite the bullet and do what needs to be done.

Tom Bates, St. Paul

 

Give in to a war criminal?

President Donald Trump will meet with invader, child stealer and Ukrainian civilian infrastructure destroyer Vladimir Putin on Aug. 15. He will explore Putin’s willingness for a ceasefire that leads to an end to the war in Ukraine. Pres. Trump has hinted that there will have to be an exchange of land for peace to happen.

Is this the best that America, the defender of freedom against imperial aggression, can do? Is America willing to give in to a war criminal? Is America willing to run from the fight for Ukraine’s democratic freedom? I hope not. If we do, America will look like a chastened puppy for getting in the way of Putin’s plan to rebuild the Russian empire. Pres. Trump likes to play tough, except when he comes up against a real bully. I hope this meeting does not become a replay of Pres. Trump’s meeting with Putin in Iceland in 2018.

Grant Abbott, St. Paul

 

Who would trust such an agreement?

Who would trust any agreement made by Vladimir Putin and President Trump? They don’t honor their agreements with other countries. These two have already reneged on the 1994 Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances that guaranteed Ukrainian borders and sovereignty. Yet Trump is trying to distract us from his past escapades with convicted sex criminal Epstein by bringing his pal Putin to Alaska to negotiate a “Peace Plan” for Ukraine. Putin is a convicted war criminal from his war on Ukraine, and by international law he should be arrested when he lands in the U.S. But instead, Trump will celebrate him in Alaska.

We all want peace in Ukraine, but there will be no lasting peace unless there is justice for Ukraine from the criminal behavior of Russia. Rather than justice, Trump appears to want a stoppage of the war and is willing to sell out Ukrainian sovereignty over its territory.  A comprehensive peace plan would include Ukraine and the European Union in the negotiations.  Instead, wanna-be Emperor Trump is meeting with his corruption mentor to carve up Ukraine.  Back in 2016, Trump worked through his campaign manager Paul Manafort (since convicted of eight felonies relating to tax and bank fraud) and a Putin operative discussing a corrupt plan to establish “peace” in Ukraine by awarding the Donbas region in Ukraine to Russia for helping Trump win the election. Now in his second term, Trump can help Putin win this region.

What the world needs is a peace process that brings justice to Ukraine.

Chris and Sue Lyons, St. Paul

 

A path to authoritarianism

The Trump administration is taking our nation down a path to authoritarianism. He is federalizing the police force in Washington, D.C., when violent crime is down 26 percent since 2023.  He will be kowtowing to Vladimir Putin in his meeting in Alaska, throwing Ukraine under the bus. Shades of Neville Chamberlain. He has made permanent tax breaks to billionaires like himself. In imposing tariffs averaging 19 percent on other nations, he usurps the power of Congress and will be fueling inflation and increasing the cost of consumer goods for our middle class.

Arthur E. Higinbotham, Northfield

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The ‘real threat to democracy’

A recent letter writer in the Sunday paper thinks Americans should be outraged by the “real threat to democracy” revealed by “recently declassified documents” which he claims prove that “Obama officials” and other Democrats, like Sen. (former Representative) Adam Schiff, created a “false narrative that Trump colluded with Russia to win the 2016 election.”

I would have thought that the “real threat to democracy” was Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election by spreading the Big Lie that it was stolen from him, by trying to coerce state election officials to change the vote counts, by developing slates of fake electors to be substituted for the real ones and then by organizing an insurrectionist mob to storm the U.S. Capitol to prevent the certification of the 2020 election results by Congress.

Or I might have thought the“real threat to democracy” is Trump’s present attempts to interfere with the 2026 election by having Texas and other states gerrymander their Congressional districts to guarantee Republican control of Congress for the next three years, if not forever. Or practically every other action taken by Trump since becoming president on Jan. 20.

But ironically, it turns out that the “recently classified documents” which this letter cites are themselves “fake documents and false narratives” that are being propagated by “high level officials in the FBI and CIA”, now under Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard. Gabbard is using her current “high public office” platform to propagate a new Big Lie that President Obama was part of a “treasonous conspiracy in 2016 committed by officials at the highest level of our government.” The goal of this alleged conspiracy, according to Gabbard, “was to subvert the will of the American people and enact what was essentially a years-long coup.”

That’s Gabbard’s opinion in her press release which she claims is supported by a “Russian Hoax” memo and a “Report” consisting of 114 pages of mostly redacted assorted memos, emails and other writings from 2016-2018. While this “Report” does generally concern the issue of Russian attempts to influence the 2016 election, it is nothing more than hearsay and opinions by government employees about what others are writing and their assessments of these writings.

I found that FactCheck.org conducted its own analysis of Gabbard’s inflammatory claims on July 23, 2025, concluding that Gabbard is “misleading”, that she “distorts the facts” and “relies on a nonexistent contradiction in the 2017 intelligence report.”
Despite its worthlessness as actual evidence admissible to prove any conspiracy, Gabbard’s press release, the “Russian Hoax Memo” and the 114-page “Report” have tremendous value as MAGA propaganda to feed baseless MAGA conspiracy theories and rally the base but also to deflect public attention from the Jeffrey Epstein files.

The “real threat to democracy” is the eagerness of Trump and his lackeys to use false propaganda to divide the American public, undermine the American public’s support for democracy and establish himself as dictator controlling one-party rule.

Jon Erik Kingstad, Oakdale

Today in History: August 16, state of emergency declared amid Michael Brown shooting protests

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Today is Saturday, Aug. 16, the 228th day of 2025. There are 137 days left in the year.

Today in history:

On Aug. 16, 2014, Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon declared a state of emergency and imposed a curfew in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson, where police and protesters repeatedly clashed in the week since a Black 18-year-old, Michael Brown, was shot to death by a white police officer.

Also on this date:

In 1777, American forces won the Battle of Bennington in what was considered a turning point of the Revolutionary War.

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In 1812, Detroit fell to British and Native American forces in the War of 1812.

In 1861, President Abraham Lincoln issued Proclamation 86, which prohibited the states of the Union from engaging in commercial trade with states that were in rebellion — i.e., the Confederacy.

In 1896, gold was discovered in Canada’s Yukon Territory, sparking the “Klondike Fever” that would draw tens of thousands to the region in search of fortune.

In 1948, baseball legend Babe Ruth died in New York at age 53.

In 1954, the first issue of “Sports Illustrated” was released.

In 1962, the Beatles fired their original drummer, Pete Best, replacing him with Ringo Starr.

In 1977, Elvis Presley died at his Graceland estate in Memphis, Tennessee at the age of 42; forty-one years later, in 2018, singer Aretha Franklin, known as the “Queen of Soul,” died in Detroit at the age of 76.

In 1978, James Earl Ray, convicted assassin of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., told a Capitol Hill hearing he did not commit the crime, saying he’d been set up by a mysterious man called “Raoul.”

In 1987, people worldwide began a two-day celebration of the “Harmonic Convergence,” which heralded what believers called the start of a new, purer age of humankind.

In 2020, lightning sparked the August Complex wildfire in California. More than 1,600 square miles — greater than the size of Rhode Island — would burn over the following three months.

Today’s Birthdays:

Actor Julie Newmar is 92.
Film director Bruce Beresford is 85.
Actor Bob Balaban is 80.
Ballerina Suzanne Farrell is 80.
Actor Lesley Ann Warren is 79.
Actor Reginald VelJohnson is 73.
Singer/author/TV personality Kathie Lee Gifford is 72.
Singer J.T. Taylor (Kool and the Gang) is 72.
Movie director James Cameron is 71.
Singer/actor Madonna is 67.
Actor Angela Bassett is 67.
Actor Timothy Hutton is 65.
Actor Steve Carell (kuh-REHL’) is 63.
Country musician Emily Strayer (The Chicks) is 53.
Actor/filmmaker Taika Waititi is 50.
Singer Vanessa Carlton is 45.
Country singer Dan Smyers (Dan & Shay) is 38.
Actor Rumer Willis is 37.
U.S. Olympic gold medal swimmer Caeleb Dressel is 29.
Tennis player Jannik Sinner is 24.