Each year about this time, the Maine Warden Service urges us to use extreme caution before venturing out onto any ice that may be covering Maine’s waterways.
This is timely advice. On Jan. 7, Richard Dumont, 52, of North Attleboro, Massachusetts, died when his snowsled went through the ice on Messalonskee Lake. A few years back, three night-time snowsledders all perished in one night on Rangeley Lake when they and their machines broke through thin ice.
Many of Maine’s lakes and ponds may appear to be frozen. However, safe ice conditions cannot be assumed.
Ice conditions vary greatly throughout the state, and while ice conditions may be safe in some spots, they can be very dangerous in others. The Maine Warden Service recommends that people check the thickness of any ice before venturing out for any activity on frozen water.
If you must go on the ice, the Maine Warden Service offers these tips for ice safety:
- Never guess the thickness of the ice — Check it. Check the ice in several different places using an auger or some other means to make a test hole and determine the thickness. Make several, beginning at the shore, and continuing as you go out.
- Check the ice with a partner, so if something does happen, there is someone there to help you. If you are doing it alone, wear a lifejacket.
- If ice at the shoreline is cracked or squishy, stay off. Watch out for thin, clear or honeycombed ice. Dark snow and dark ice are other signs of weak spots.
- Avoid areas with currents, around bridges and pressure ridges. Wind and currents can break ice.
- Parents should alert children of unsafe ice in their area, and make sure that they stay off the ice. If they insist on using their new skates, suggest an indoor skating rink.
If you break through the ice, remember:
- Don’t panic.
- Don’t try to climb out immediately — you will probably break the ice again. Reach for solid ice.
- Lay both arms on the unbroken ice and kick hard. This will help lift your body onto the ice. Once on the ice, roll, DON’T WALK, to safety.
To help someone who has fallen through the ice, lie down flat and reach with a branch, plank or rope or form a human chain. Don’t stand. After securing the victim, wiggle backwards to the solid ice.
Again, snowsledders take note: Snowsledding at night on frozen waterways can be tricky business, especially for those unfamiliar with the conditions of a lake, pond or other waterway.
The author is editor of the Northwoods Sporting Journal. He is also a Maine Guide and host of a weekly radio program “Maine Outdoors,” heard Sundays at 7 p.m. on The Voice of Maine News-Talk Network. He has authored three books. Online purchase information is available at www.maineoutdoorpublications.com.
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