Tig
Veteran Member
I created this thread as a reference because each year people come to TBN looking for the answer. I've lived on the edge of a lake and ice fished and traveled on frozen lakes most of my life. I'm a self proclaimed good judge of ice conditions.
It's never safe, it's a calculated risk. Safe just isn't the correct word for a frozen lake, pond or river and no one on the internet can honestly asses the risk of your lake because they do not know your lake. Springs, currents, marshes, creeks, sunshine, extreme cold all cause problems with ice. 5 mm of snow can hide every one of these problems.
Over the years I have known a more than dozen people who have gone through "safe" ice. The uncle of one of these people drowned. Not in the initial accident but in the confusion after. Falling in with a vehicle is not like jumping in the pool. It's an accident, it can be violent and confusing. Especially in the context of a tractor roll over. You may be injured or knocked unconscious before you ever get wet. As a kid I once stepped in an ankle deep puddle only to slide into 3' of water where I was trapped by a slippery incline on all sides. Fortunately I was able to swim close enough to a ladder on a dock to grab hold and climb out. Two years ago I almost had a similar accident 600m out from my home. There's no ladders out there.
The most common safety strategy I hear is "leave the window or door open" as you drive or "stay in the shallows". Well here is a guy who one year ago today was standing beside his truck in the shallows, he died.

Truck plunges through ice into Ottawa River | Canada | News | Toronto Sun
Where I live I have fished the lake in winter since the 60s. Last year two vehicles were lost in an area that had never been a concern. My brother in law was fishing on more than 18" of ice 100 feet away from the first one. His buddy walked over in disbelief and fell in before he even got there.
The internet can't tell you if you should go out on the ice. It's your call.
Over the years I have known a more than dozen people who have gone through "safe" ice. The uncle of one of these people drowned. Not in the initial accident but in the confusion after. Falling in with a vehicle is not like jumping in the pool. It's an accident, it can be violent and confusing. Especially in the context of a tractor roll over. You may be injured or knocked unconscious before you ever get wet. As a kid I once stepped in an ankle deep puddle only to slide into 3' of water where I was trapped by a slippery incline on all sides. Fortunately I was able to swim close enough to a ladder on a dock to grab hold and climb out. Two years ago I almost had a similar accident 600m out from my home. There's no ladders out there.
The most common safety strategy I hear is "leave the window or door open" as you drive or "stay in the shallows". Well here is a guy who one year ago today was standing beside his truck in the shallows, he died.

Truck plunges through ice into Ottawa River | Canada | News | Toronto Sun
Where I live I have fished the lake in winter since the 60s. Last year two vehicles were lost in an area that had never been a concern. My brother in law was fishing on more than 18" of ice 100 feet away from the first one. His buddy walked over in disbelief and fell in before he even got there.
The internet can't tell you if you should go out on the ice. It's your call.