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Avoiding open leads
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Open leads do not have to be crossed in water.
Most often you will find bridges across them. At
most areas the leads will be narrow enough to
jump, or to bridge with a sled. Place the sleds
in the water alongside the edges and ski over on
top of them.
Some leads are moving with industrial style
screeches as the ice slowly works its way around.
Those leads can be wide and tricky to cross. You
will jump from ice pan to ice pan, hauling the
sled behind. Trouble is that a lead can open wide
pretty fast, 150 ft in thirty minutes. If you are
slow, you will find yourself in a situation where
the shore is slowly drifting away with you
stranded on a wobbly pan surrounded by open
water. Crossing such areas require fast and
determined action. Sometimes you can use a
strong, floating pan to your advantage. Get on it
sled and all, push away from the shore with your
ski pole, drift over to the other side and get
off. No tickets required.
Most leads freeze over during the night, at least
in the early season of March and April. It is a
good bet to travel early in the mornings.
But leads are not always bad news. Some leads
offer wonderful highways. They are either areas
of newly frozen large leads, forming huge, flat
pans, or northbound semi-open leads with smooth,
flat ice on the edges. Always look out for those
areas and head for them fast! |
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