These Welders Make Killer Ice Fishing Spears

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These Welders Make Killer Ice Fishing Spears


The distance between a Minnesota spear fisherman and a singer from the Metropolitan Opera in New York City can’t be measured by time zones, however somewhat by the singular devotion to craft.

That’s pretty much as good a means as any to explain Minnesota spear-forgers Loren Hjelle and his son Scott. The pair name themselves welders, however that doesn’t absolutely describe their superb artisan skills. But first, Met contra-alto…

“A fellow came in here one day from over by Sunberg, a recently retired opera singer,” Loren says, leaning into his chair, surrounded by the soot-covered instruments of the metallic commerce. “This guy had his father’s old spear in his hand, and he wanted to see if I could make one just like it. He was going spearing for pike, and didn’t want to take a chance on losing that heirloom piece.” It was destined to be a endlessly wall-hanger.

“That old spear was built using tines from an old pitchfork,” Loren Hjelle says. Hjelle (pronounced JELLY, like in peanut butter and…) took on the duty.

After constructing that spear, pitchfork tines turned Hjelle’s new medium. He began looking for out previous pitchforks, and his signature spears began displaying up in spearing shacks all by way of the northern-tier of North America. They’re used for spearing northern pike, a pursuit that appears to be rising extra well-liked every winter. Soon, stacks of pitchforks and previous silage forks littered a again room, ready for his or her new lives on the ice to start.

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Loren and Scott with a few of their latest creations. Mitch Kezar

“Pitchfork tines,” Loren says, “are not round, they’re elliptically shaped — like an egg. They’re more oblong. We cut the tines off and rotate them, so they’re strong and long, and some we make with multiple barbs.”

Loren remembered a dialog with a fellow spearer, who marveled at his creation. “How come your tines are so long?” he requested. “How come you want your tines to only go part way through a fish?” got here Loren’s reply. End of dialogue.

The elder Hjelle graduated from welding college in 1971, and was requested by an older good friend if he’d ever made a spear. He made that first one from some materials discovered on century-old railroad elements, again when rail gangs gas-welded the rails. After that first effort, a couple of extra associates got here round asking for or bartering for spears. Hjelle was hooked.

He took his early spears to a couple decoy reveals and solely offered a few them. Looking over at his and Scotts’ trendy creations, he laughs, “They didn’t look anything like this. Many of those [early spears] were made from garage-door springs we had to straighten and weld. Some of those guys would give our spears names like ‘Widow Maker,’ ‘Death Wish,’ stuff like that.” 

ice fishing spears
Old pitchforks able to be made into spears. Mitch Kezar

But that’s not the case, Hjelle trendy spears are pure purposeful artwork.

Scott, 34, made a couple of spears as a younger lad for 4-H initiatives and for a sophisticated metallic class. Early in his profession he was tasked with straightening out these storage door springs for his dad. Now he’s an integral companion within the spear making artwork — a spear-making artist in residence.

Scott put photos of his first efforts on a Facebook web page referred to as “Fear the Spear” and that’s when their enterprise blew up.

“I joined because I grew up spearing, and I wanted to see what else I could learn from like-minded sportsmen,” he says. He put images of his dad’s finest spears on the positioning, which garnered much more curiosity. He then made his personal Facebook web page, and now the Hjelles have as many orders as they will fill, with greater than 3,000 followers watching their endeavors on-line.

Ice fishing spears
Loren heats a part of a spear. Mitch Kezar

“The number one custom option is twisted square tines from silage forks,” Scott says. “Those square tines are ideal for strength and flexibility. They maintain rigidness all the way around, but that’s not why I think people want them. People like our twisted tines, which need to start with a square stock. And our spears are truly balanced because, like a throwing dart, they’re end-heavy.”

“Some folks want special twists, reverse twists,” Loren says. “And all that cool stuff takes way more time.” 

READ NEXT: This Wood Carver Is Making the Most Realistic (and Deadly) Fish Decoys You’ve Ever Seen

The wishbone look, the place the primary shaft of the spear splits then comes again collectively close to the enterprise finish of issues, is exclusive to a Hjelle spear. No different maker has that characteristic.

“I love metal art,” Loren says. “I teach welding at a local college and my students are making a full-size German shepherd metal dog in class for the police department in Willmar. It will be displayed in their lobby as a permanent fixture. That’s part of thing we like to teach at school — creativity. When welding gets combined with art… well, boy. I’m there, I just love this stuff.”

When Scott got here again to the enterprise his father began, it modified his life. 

ice fishing spear
Scott hones a spear. Mitch Kezar

“This spear making blew my mind. I get to use my hands and be creative,” Scott says. “When I was in school, I couldn’t paint or draw. Art did not register with me. These spears opened up a part of my brain that never surfaced before. Now, I learn all these new things. We have a new laser engraver, and right now we can put almost anything you want written or drawn on your spear. It’s gonna open up a lot of customization we never thought of before.”

Rocking again in his chair, Loren says, “The coolest thing about this spear making is that without intention, Scott can have this business for the rest of his career and — like decoy making — it can be lucrative if you work at it. It’s turned into something I can leave my family.” 

But no good spear story can finish with out a fish story, and Loren has loads. 

ice fishing spear
The last product. Mitch Kezar

“So, I was way up on a northern Minnesota lake, and this 24-odd pound fish – which looked big as a railroad tie — floated in beneath me, paralleling my decoy. I thought, ‘Please turn, please turn!’ And like a battleship that old fish took forever to get turned. He slides back in. I had my spear in my hand, and he was coming right in beneath me. I’ve never had buck fever, but right then I sure got a bad case of big fish fever. I threw that spear so hard — I missed him. Gone!  I just couldn’t believe it. I guess I’m a better spear builder than I am a spearer!” 

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