Journal Entry
Ice Flowersice flowers form only on very cold nights. Photo by Jeff Peneston (PolarTREC 2008/2009), Courtesy of ARCUS

Even at temperatures well below zero you can punch through river ice. Alaskan Natives, sled dogs, and veteran fur trappers all know this. And in the wrong place at the wrong time, it can kill you.

As an Alaskan winter wears on, river ice thickens, often to a depth that can support heavy vehicles. But all ice, regardless of thickness, is prone to cracking due to currents beneath it as well as expansion and contraction from daily temperature changes. And when cracks occur, water seeps upward on top of the ice. This layer of overflow can remain slushy if it mixes with snow, or it can form its own ice creating an ice-overflow water-ice sandwich.

Sometimes regions of open water can form as river ice shifts or, more rarely, warm weather spells melt it. In either case, the normally frigid temperatures quickly refreeze the top layer. But if snow falls soon after refreezing, it can insulate this thin ice and keep it from thickening further. This thin ice is almost impossible to detect until its too late.

The conference roomThis is where our training takes place.

Two full days of indoor trainings had left me thirsty for some fresh air. Even if it was subzero out. Andre joined me for an evening walk before rendezvousing with other PolarTREC-ers for a Thai dinner. Just before leaving the hotel Lisa warned us about thin ice on the Chena River - our intended destination. She had heard of patches of dangerous holes out there.

Upon reaching the river Andre and I proceeded cautiously, walking either on shore or just offshore, in case Lisa's warning proved accurate. About a quarter mile downriver we had just crossed under a bridge when Andre, normally a couple inches taller than me, dropped from view. His right leg had plunged knee deep through the ice into the river. His reactions were lightning-quick: he rolled on his back toward shore - the better to distribute his weight more evenly - and quickly stood up on solid ground. So fast did he do this that the water never made into his boot, it simply froze to the outside of his pants.

Conference Room Picture Practice Day in the hotel conference room

Andre thawed his pants while enjoying a red curry dinner. It pays to be cautious and know what to do in a crisis.

Comments

Lisa Seff

Hi Russell! Brrrrrrrr! So glad you stayed along the edge of the river! Great description of the overflow. I sent your link to our english teacher who is just in the middle of To Build a Fire, and they were talking about the dangers of overflow on a river!(:
Lisa

Guest

Hello Mr. Hood, This is Athena D. from Los Coches Creek Middle School. I have a question. How the ice flower make an ice sandwich and how do you get it off the river ice? Thank You.

Guest

Hello Mr. Hood, This is Athena D. from Los Coches Creek Middle School. I have a question. How the ice flower make an ice sandwich and how do you get it off the river ice? Thank You.

Russell Hood

Athena-I think you are referring that odd formation on the glacier that I took the picture of.  To be honest, I don't know how that was formed.  My best guess is that water filled a crack in the glacier ice and froze slowly - creating that pattern - long after the glacier ice around it had already formed.  There is no easy way to remove that from the glacier ice, you'd have to work very hard to do that.  It was a pretty neat structure, though!-Mr. Hood

Russell Hood

Lisa-
I love the To Build a Fire story. I'd be honored if they wish to read
my journal.

-Russell

Carol Scott

Hi Russell, welcome to Fairbanks (all the way from Anchorage!) That's a very nice explanation of overflow. I know when I moved to Fairbanks a long time ago this was a very new concept -- liquid water existing in really cold temperatures.
Glad all is well after your Chena River walk... they moved the Feb 1st. Yukon Quest race start from the Chena River to Second Avenue as the river ice is untrustworthy after our thawing temps in January.

Russell Hood

Yes, it has been a very warm winter. Thanks for the response.

Alex Eilers

You are in for an amazing adventure! Can't wait to follow your journey!

Alex Eilers
PolarTREC Teacher - 2012 and 2014

Guest

Still have all my fingers and toes!

Michelle Brown

It seems like you and Andre are already finding some adventures despite days inside. I loved how you included some interesting science behind how ice forms on the river, and then had an exciting story to tell about it. I'm glad Andre's leg is still in tact!