Well, we put a steam bath out on the lake and get good and hot before plunging 
in. The worst is that shards of ice stick to the bottoms of your feet, a bit 
like sticking a tongue to steel in the frost. Once you hit the water though it 
melts off and of course you aren't long back in the steam bath before it falls 
away.

You wouldn't last long without heating up well first. Three to five minutes 
seems to kill people when they drop their snowmobiles through the ice. There 
are ways of lengthening that out some but hypothermia and exhaustion soon 
defeat one.

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 2:16 PM
  Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Ice Cubes the Hard Way


  Dale, I can't imagine even getting my big toe wet at 35 below, say nothing 
  of choosing to swim through the ice in February. We used to cut a whole in 
  the lake ice for our local polar bear club so they could go for a swim on 
  New Years Morning. The temperature was usually somewhere between 10 and 20 
  above and no matter how good the New Years Eve celebration might have been, 
  I always considered that to be a pretty drastic cure for a hang over.

  The maximum thickness of ice that we could cut with our equipment was about 
  18 Inches. We preferred to handle ice about 8 or 10 inches thick. On the 
  rare occasions that ice on the lakes got thicker than we could handle, we 
  would let the water in previously cut areas refreeze until the ice reached 
  the desired thickness, and then re cut the same area. Early in the season 
  when the ice got to be about 4 inches thick we would cut large blocks and 
  slide them under adjacent un cut sections of ice and let the two layers 
  freeze together. The next morning we could cut 8 inch ice. That was only 
  the first of the many steps required to get ice cubes for our summer time 
  lemonade back in the 40s.

  Paul Franklin



   

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Reply via email to