MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 63,317
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
Why does your pond have to be plowed? Ice skating party, perhaps or are you worried about fish kill with the heavy snow cover?
I love ice fishing. I go as often as possible. I went twice this weekend. I would not take your tractor out on the ice. Get a snow blower or get an air bubbler to keep an open spot.
I feel comfortable on 3-4 inches of good, hard ice. Better if it is 5-6 inches. The ice today was creepy because we have had snow on top of it for a while. Some places, it was a solid foot thick. Other places, there was a thin crust of ice about a quarter inch thick, then about 8 inches of slushy water, then about 4 inches of clear ice. You'd be walking along just fine, then break through and water would splash up and you thought you just bought the big one. /forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif I almost went through last year because I was careless, trusting someone else to check the ice thickness. Always check it yourself. Check it often and in many places. Never go on the ice alone. I've seen about a dozen people drown after falling through thin ice in my lifetime. It is not something to take lightly. Best of luck to you.
I love ice fishing. I go as often as possible. I went twice this weekend. I would not take your tractor out on the ice. Get a snow blower or get an air bubbler to keep an open spot.
I feel comfortable on 3-4 inches of good, hard ice. Better if it is 5-6 inches. The ice today was creepy because we have had snow on top of it for a while. Some places, it was a solid foot thick. Other places, there was a thin crust of ice about a quarter inch thick, then about 8 inches of slushy water, then about 4 inches of clear ice. You'd be walking along just fine, then break through and water would splash up and you thought you just bought the big one. /forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif I almost went through last year because I was careless, trusting someone else to check the ice thickness. Always check it yourself. Check it often and in many places. Never go on the ice alone. I've seen about a dozen people drown after falling through thin ice in my lifetime. It is not something to take lightly. Best of luck to you.