Click Here to Subscribe

Photo Gallery: OLMA Graduation

Bishop's Schedule

The Bishop’s Schedule, June 2 – 14

by Staff Reports
May 28, 2026
0
ShareTweet

Featured

Remaining human in the age of AI

by Michael Walsh
1 week ago
0
ShareTweet

Tolkien, Beethoven, MLK: The voices that resonate in ‘Magnifica Humanitas’

by admin
2 weeks ago
0
ShareTweet

Military Services’ bishop shares journey, talks mission to support veterans

by Julia Train
2 weeks ago
0
ShareTweet
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Home
Sunday, June 7, 2026
Catholic Star Herald
  • News
    • From Bishop Williams
    • Parish Life
    • Diocesan News
    • Sports
    • Columns
      • From Bishop Sullivan
    • Obituaries
    • World/Nation
  • Catholic Schools
  • Español
  • Features
    • Special Supplements
      • Thank You Bishop Sullivan
      • Welcome Bishop Williams
      • Jubilarians
    • Entertainment
      • Movie Reviews
    • Photo Galleries
    • Talking Catholic
    • Latest Videos
    • Health and Wellness
  • Advertise
  • More
    • Classified
    • Subscribe
    • Contact Us
  • News
    • From Bishop Williams
    • Parish Life
    • Diocesan News
    • Sports
    • Columns
      • From Bishop Sullivan
    • Obituaries
    • World/Nation
  • Catholic Schools
  • Español
  • Features
    • Special Supplements
      • Thank You Bishop Sullivan
      • Welcome Bishop Williams
      • Jubilarians
    • Entertainment
      • Movie Reviews
    • Photo Galleries
    • Talking Catholic
    • Latest Videos
    • Health and Wellness
  • Advertise
  • More
    • Classified
    • Subscribe
    • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Catholic Star Herald
No Result
View All Result
Home World/Nation

Minnesota priest casts for souls as he leads men’s fly fishing retreat

OSV News by OSV News
October 26, 2023
in World/Nation
Reading Time: 8 mins read
0
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Father Jake Anderson, pastor and director of St. Lawrence Catholic Church and Newman Center in Minneapolis, makes a cast with his fly rod on a small stream in Highlandville, Iowa, May 23, 2023, as he tries to catch trout during a men’s fly fishing retreat he led. (OSV News photo/Dave Hrbacek, The Catholic Spirit)

By Dave Hrbacek

HIGHLANDVILLE, Iowa (OSV News) — With the stealth of a Navy SEAL, Father Jake Anderson crept through tall grass on the bank of a small stream in northeast Iowa. He stayed low to the ground as he glanced at the current flow, his right hand grasping a fly rod.

When he spotted a change in current where a chunky brown trout might lie in ambush waiting for a bug to float by, he put his fly rod in motion.

The back-and-forth movements were smooth and snappy, the rod seeming like an extension of his arm. The keen attention to detail, the passion for hooking trout on his assortment of hand-tied flies, and more than two decades of experience wading streams in several states have made him an expert in the eyes of anyone who fishes with him — though far less so in his own eyes.

On this particular trip to a state that is home to miles and miles of blue-ribbon trout streams, he was joined by 13 other men, including a priest he has fished with, and another man who was ordained to the priesthood just days after the retreat.

It was an annual men’s fly fishing retreat, complete with a spiritual theme and a patron saint — St. Zeno of Verona, after whom they have named a group they formed, with members going on local outings throughout the year that sometimes include wives and children.

St. Zeno, who lived in the fourth century, often went fishing in the river that flowed through Verona, which is why art depicting him often includes a fish dangling from his crosier.

The 11 laymen at the May 21-24 retreat belong to the parishes of St. Michael and St. Mary in Stillwater, Minnesota, where Father Anderson served as parochial vicar from 2015 to 2018. He was looking for an activity that could draw men together for fellowship, fun and faith, and discovered that there were several parishioners who shared his passion for fly fishing.

Among them was Pat Houlton, 73, who helped get the group — St. Zeno Anglers — started in 2016 and helped Father Anderson launch the first fly fishing retreat four years ago.

Also making the retreat were Father Jim Livingston, whom Father Anderson has fished with in recent years and is pastor of St. Paul in Ham Lake, Minnesota, and now-Father Julian Druffner. (He was ordained to the priesthood for the Diocese of Superior, Wisconsin, May 28).

Ordained in 2015 for the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, Father Anderson, 37, is currently pastor and director of St. Lawrence Catholic Church and Newman Center in Minneapolis.

His devotion to what some call an “art” started when he was 11 and growing up on a small farm near Baldwin, Wisconsin. He remembers exactly when he first desired to pick up a fly rod – it was a day in June when he and his father watched the movie “A River Runs Through it,” a fly fishing drama produced by Robert Redford in 1992 and starring Brad Pitt. It won an Oscar that year for cinematography, with spectacular river and mountain scenes filmed in Montana.

After watching the movie, the future priest was hooked on fly fishing and told his dad he wanted to learn how to do it.

His father, Mark, who has since died, went to the garage, pulled out an old fly fishing rod that he had made while in college, and started teaching his young son how to cast.

Father Anderson “started practicing in the yard,” he said, then he “bought some cheap rubber hip waders.” Wearing the waders, he started making regular trips on his bike to the Rush River, a few hundred yards off their property. He quizzed people who were fly fishing and took copious notes about what he saw and heard; he also poured over books on the subject.

His passion grew and continued through formation for the priesthood at St. Paul Seminary in St. Paul. He got away to fish whenever he could, and grabbed fellow seminarians to join him.

Day trips happened during his free time, and he waded miles of streams with his fly rod in search of trout. He enjoyed teaching other men to fish, but even more, he wanted to “deepen a sense of fraternity.”

This year’s retreat took place May 21-24, with fly fishing sessions in the mornings and afternoons, and retreat talks, prayer and Mass interspersed during other parts of the day. For Father Anderson, it’s as easy to mingle faith with fly fishing as it is to drop a hand-tied fly called a “woodchuck caddis” into a trout’s line of vision.

“We want to just keep it as simple as possible,” he explained in an interview with The Catholic Spirit, newspaper of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. “It’s not like a retreat center. You’re not going into formal silence and there’s not three meditations a day. It’s more like just taking something guys like doing and yet having the Lord at the center.”

Father Anderson celebrated the retreat’s opening Mass outside on a deck of the large cabin where the men were staying. He engaged them with a homily about the ascension of Jesus, with deep conversations about spiritual and earthly topics continuing through dinner and well after sunset around a campfire.

“There’s something beautiful” about going on the retreat, said Mark Setterstrom, 39, who is married with children and at one time played in the NFL. “I know these men so deeply. There’s such a deep commonality that comes together, not just from the fishing, but (from) spending time together in the Eucharist, in prayer, and then in God’s great creation.”

“This is the most deeply manly thing most of us will get in the entire year,” he added.

For him, it boils down to one thing: “We know Christ through this.”

The men who came this year ranged in age from 28 to 85, and that is part of the draw. Some of them are young fathers who like to fish and pray together with men who have decades of experience in both raising children and working in the professional world. The older men are willing and eager to share what they have learned throughout their lives, including the art of fly fishing.

Houlton, in addition to helping organize the retreat, serves as one of its main fly fishing mentors, a role he relishes.

“It’s just great fellowship,” said Houlton, who counts Father Livingston among those he has taught to fly fish. “As men, we bond through activity. … And, the fly fishing allows us to have an activity that we can share together.”

It also opens the door to more serious topics while sitting around a campfire at the end of the day — like the battle Houlton’s wife, Janet, is fighting with cancer, and the battle his son-in-law’s sister is also fighting with cancer. Fishing first and talking later is, perhaps, an indirect and winding road to the things that matter in life. But, it is a destination these men always seem to reach during the retreat.

“If you put men together in something like this,” Houlton said, “then they will talk more freely and they will talk about things — and, I think, more personal things. It opens that up.”
It is why Houlton declares: “This is my kind of retreat.”

The oldest man at this year’s gathering, Buzz Kriesel, 85, has been on all four of the retreats, and he attends most of the local outings, too.

“They’re all deeply faithful men, Catholic men,” Kriesel said. And “the families that they’re raising — the younger guys — are absolutely amazing.”

During a campfire on the first evening of the retreat, he gave a tribute to Father Anderson.

“God bless you,” he told the priest, as applause broke out among the men encircling the embers. “You’re the glue for this whole thing, you really are. You give us the heart, the spirit — and you out-fish all of us.”


Dave Hrbacek is senior content specialist for The Catholic Spirit, the news outlet of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

Previous Post

Synod prays warring nations will learn to listen, respect each other

Next Post

Singer ValLimar Jansen to lead Eucharist performance Oct. 29

Related Posts

Pope Leo XIV talks to visitors and pilgrims during his weekly general audience in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican June 3, 2026. Before the audience, the pontiff met with Catholic university leaders and told them that they have a responsibility to instill in their students a passion “not only for intellectual truth, but the Truth that is Christ himself.”(CNS photo/Vatican Media)
World/Nation

Pope Leo urges Catholic universities to instill passion for the truth found in Christ

June 4, 2026
Msgr. Joseph Francis Buh is pictured in an 1889 photo. Msgr. Buh is a missionary priest who served Northeastern Minnesota and has a cause for sainthood that began in 2023. (OSV News photo/courtesy Diocese of Duluth)
World/Nation

Meet the amazing missionary priest who could be one of Minnesota’s first saints

June 4, 2026
A large cross is pictured above a civil war cemetery and memorial in the Valley of the Fallen, now known as the Valley of Cuelgamuros, near Madrid Oct. 24, 2019. As Pope Leo XIV descends toward Madrid on June 6, 2026, one landmark likely to catch his eye is a towering cross rising above the cemetery at Paracuellos del Jarama, on the outskirts of the Spanish capital. (OSV News photo/Emilio Naranjo, pool via Reuters)
World/Nation

Spaniards hope Pope Leo’s visit promotes reconciliation amid Civil War wounds

June 3, 2026
Pope Leo XIV greets newlyweds after his weekly general audience in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican June 3, 2026. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)
World/Nation

Liturgical rites and symbols reveal God’s presence, Pope Leo says

June 3, 2026
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn Youtube RSS

No Result
View All Result

Latest News

Webinar on human trafficking set for June 9 ahead of World Cup

CCUSA’s People of Hope Museum

Faith, service, hope on display in Catholic Charities museum

Bishop celebrates Cathedral’s dedication anniversary

Father Nickolas Naticchione

Latest Videos

View Ordination of Nickolas B. Naticchione in Cathedral

The legacy of Pope Francis

Pope Leo’s first Easter message

See livestream of Bishop Williams celebrating annual Chrism Mass

Pope Leo XIV’s first Palm Sunday

Around the Diocese

  • The Diocese of Camden
  • Talking Catholic Podcast
  • Catholic Charities
  • Advertise
  • Catholic Cemeteries
  • VITALity Healthcare Services
  • Housing Services
  • Camden Deacon
  • Camden Priest
  • South Jersey Catholic Schools
  • Man Up South Jersey
  • Catholic Business Network

Additional Resources

  • New Jersey Independent Victim Compensation Fund
  • Quick Guide to Reporting Sexual Abuse
  • List of Credibly Accused Priests and Parish Resources
  • Bishop’s Commission Report on Catholic Schools

Reorganization of the Diocese

  • Chapter 11 Claims filing info
  • Chapter 11 Prime Clerk Filing

© All Rights Reserved | June 07, 2026 | Catholic Star Herald of the Diocese of Camden

En español/Sa Tagalog

Add the Catholic Star Herald to your home screen

For Android users(Chrome) tap the at the top right vertical 3 dots then tap “Add to Home Screen”

For iPhone tap:at the bottom and then tap “Add to Home Screen”

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

If you need assistance with submitting your subscription, please call Neal Cullen at 856-583-6139, or email Neal.Cullen@camdendiocese.org

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • From Bishop Williams
    • Parish Life
    • Diocesan News
    • Sports
    • Columns
      • From Bishop Sullivan
    • Obituaries
    • World/Nation
  • Catholic Schools
  • Español
  • Features
    • Special Supplements
      • Thank You Bishop Sullivan
      • Welcome Bishop Williams
      • Jubilarians
    • Entertainment
      • Movie Reviews
    • Photo Galleries
    • Talking Catholic
    • Latest Videos
    • Health and Wellness
  • Advertise
  • More
    • Classified
    • Subscribe
    • Contact Us

© All Rights Reserved | June 07, 2026 | Catholic Star Herald of the Diocese of Camden