That is very interesting Paul.

We didn't have that sort of sophistication of course, not being a commercial 
venture. The men did grapple the ice up a sort of skid way.

Here they cut a hole in the lake ice in February for our polar bear swim during 
winter carnival. While I have swam through the ice I haven't seen them actually 
open the hole so I don't know how they do it, by February though there can  be 
as much as three feet of ice there, they can't use a chain saw for that unless 
they go partial thickness and somehow split it away in layers. I will have to 
ask about that.

They keep it open over night and for two days so they must have to bust it up 
and scoop the shards out of the hole at intervals. Some years it isn't so cold 
but I have been in at 35 below and that makes ice very quickly. Over night I 
would guess it could make a few inches which would be a challenge to remove.

The hole isn't all that big, maybe 15 by 25 feet.

I was a much younger man when I played those silly buggers. Not sure I would do 
that now.

Dale Leavens, Cochrane Ontario Canada
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Skype DaleLeavens
Come and meet Aurora, Nakita and Nanook at our polar bear habitat.


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Paul Franklin 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Sunday, December 30, 2007 11:10 AM
  Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Ice Cubes the hard way


  Dale's recent post about ice cutting chainsaws brings back memories about 
  how my family harvested ice during the 1940s and 50s.

  My family was in the retail and wholesale ice business in North Eastern CT. 
  from about 1910 until the early 1950s. They cut 300 lbs blocs of ice off of 
  the local lakes and ponds and stored them in ice houses to be sold during 
  warm whether. From about 1940 they used power saws to cut ice off the 
  lakes. They dragged these specially made gasoline powered circular saws out 
  on to the frozen lakes to cut the ice into blocks, which they then floated 
  to an inclined conveyer called an Ice Run, which pulled the blocks of ice 
  into the top of the ice houses on the lake shore for storage. These power 
  ice saws had a two cylinder engine on a set of skids with a handle like a 
  baby carriage at one end and a long arm with a 36 inch diameter, chain 
  driven circular saw blade at the other end. Two men would pull these saws 
  handle end first across the surface of the ice in a grid pattern, cutting 
  the ice to a depth one inch less than its thickness. The cuts were 
  then finished with hand saws that had a 5 foot blade with a tee shaped 
  handle at the top. The blocks were then guided along a channel with long 
  handled ice pikes to the shore and stored in the ice house, or fished out of 
  the water and loaded on to trucks to be stored else where.

  Paul Franklin



   

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