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Freezing Coffee and Open Water in ALASKA

by Bill Montano

Hello all!!  I've been racking my brain for some more tales from the north that might be of interest. I could tell you how at forty below zero if you throw a hot cup of coffee in the air it will make a loud cracking sound and freeze in mid-air, no joke!!!  I thought  about the time that I was being tracked by a bear  while hiking by myself at 1:00 in the morning (I never saw it but could hear it growling, thrashing through the brush, almost more terrifying!!!). Then there was the time I was charged by an angry moose on the trail.  It was worn out that winter after trekking through 10 plus feet of snow. However, I decided to tell you about one of the most hair raising experiences of my life.

It was spring 2000.  I had just come from a warm weather snowmobile ride on the Chena river (for those of you unfamiliar with what exactly a snowmobile is, I have included a picture taken in the Alaska Range near Mt. McKinley). 
  I walked in the house and told my wife, Dawn, that I was able to do some good water skipping. Water skipping on a snowmobile is not all that uncommon especially during the spring when the rivers open up here in Fairbanks.  "Skipping" is not all that hard it just requires a lot of speed and some planning to get from the ice to the open water and back again. If you get it wrong, you and your snowmobile could end up at the bottom of the river.  I told Dawn to grab the video camera and film me riding on the open water, I wanted to show it to my friends later. We strapped our daughter, Alyssa (then 15 months) into the stroller and headed for the river.  Dawn took some great footage.  After making a few passes we decided to pack up and head for home.  Just then I noticed two snowmobiles heading for the same stretch of open water I had just been on. The first person made it across but I noticed that the rider hit the water awfully slow and just barely made it to the solid ice on the other side. Just as I was about to mention this to Dawn, I saw the second snowmobiler attempt to cross going WAAAY too slow.  The machine immediately started sinking down into the water. The rest sort of happened in slow motion as I saw the rider of the second snowmobile struggling to get out of the water and not having much luck pulling up onto the slippery ice. This was when I knew I had to take action. I jumped on my snowmobile, crossed the same stretch of open water to get to where they were.  I found a larger woman struggling in the water and her very petite friend (the first snowmobiler) not having much luck pulling her out. I told the smaller woman to hold my legs and I crawled out on the ice (a technique used to distribute your body weight over the ice) and adrenaline took over.  I pulled her out with ease.  This surprised me, since she was much larger than I was and also the added weight of the water in her snowsuit and helmet.  Much to her resistance, I gave her a ride back across the open river.  She thanked me and headed into a local restaurant to warm up, dry out and tell her husband what happened.  Meanwhile, Dawn was so panicked that she forgot she was holding a video camera and didn't film one of the most harrowing experiences of my life!!!

Comments

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"Wow - good work saving lives :) And that's a beautiful picture. Also, the "When" section in the sidebar is mainly for recording when the story happened, not when you wrote the story. So I removed the date you had and put "2000" instead. Now you'll see a dot on your timeline from the year 2000. Thanks for sharing!"

by Michael Kane 

"This is a little too scary for me. Those women were unbelievable lucky you were there. Dawn must have been very worried about you going out on the ice for the rescue."

by Beth Kane 

"hot coffee freezes in mid-air? Are you serious? I am impressed!"

by MZ 

"Dawn was pretty freaked out and yes coffee or any other hot liquid will freeze in mid-air if it's cold enough (usually -40 or colder). Coffee is best used for this demonstration because the color contrasts against the snow. When you throw it up in the air it makes a hissing sound followed by a giant cloud of steam and little frozen coffee droplets hitting the ground."

by Bill Montano