Cranbury Forum | Bulletin | Info Sharing
[Click here to bookmark this page: http://cranbury.info]
▪
Cranbury School
▪
Cranbury Township
▪
Cranbury Library
▪
Cranbury.org
▪
Cranburyhistory.org
(Press Ctrl and = keys to increase font size)
Search
Register (optional)
Log in to check your private messages
Log in
[http://cranbury.info]
->
News | Events
Post a reply
Username
Subject
Message body
Emoticons
Font colour:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Indigo
Violet
White
Black
Font size:
Tiny
Small
Normal
Large
Huge
Close Tags
[quote="Guest"]Some cold facts about ice New ice is usually stronger than old ice. Four inches of clear, newly‑formed ice may support one person on foot, while a foot or more of old, partially‑thawed ice may not. Ice seldom freezes uniformly. It may be a foot thick in one location and only an inch or two just a few feet away. Ice formed over flowing water and currents is often dangerous. This is especially true near streams, bridges and culverts. Also, the ice on outside river bends is usually weaker due to the undermining effects of the faster current. The insulating effect of snow slows down the freezing process. The extra weight also reduces how much weight the ice sheet can support. Also, ice near shore can be weaker than ice that is farther out. Booming and cracking ice isn’t necessarily dangerous. It only means that the ice is expanding and contracting as the temperature changes. Schools of fish or flocks of waterfowl can also adversely affect the relative safety of ice. The movement of fish can bring warm water up from the bottom of the lake. In the past, this has opened holes in the ice causing snowmobiles and cars to break through.[/quote]
Options
HTML is
ON
BBCode
is
ON
Smilies are
ON
Disable HTML in this post
Disable BBCode in this post
Disable Smilies in this post
All times are GMT - 4 Hours
Jump to:
Select a forum
Topics
----------------
News | Events
School | Parenting
Blogs by Cranbury Residents
Shopping | Good Deals | Price Talk
Home Sweet Home
House For Sale
Home Sales Pricing Records
Financial | Stocks | Mutual Funds
Cool Bytes & Bits
Garage Sale | ForSale Ads | Things to Trade
Tech Related (PC, Internet, HDTV, etc.)
Interesing and Fun Stuff to Share
What's Your Favorite?
Interests | Hobbies
Cranbury History
Radom Thoughts | Sports | Kitchen Sink
Amazon Deals
Local Business Info
----------------
Local Business Ads (FREE)
Support
----------------
Daily Sponsored Message & Amazon Ads
About Us | Your Privacy | Suggestion | Sponsored
Test Area (Practice your posting skills here)
Topic review
Author
Message
Dan Mulligan
Posted: Tue, Jan 25 2011, 11:19 pm EST
Post subject: Re: Brainerd Lake skating?
It was a great day to be on the lake today and it really seemed like everyone from the little kids on up to the adults really had a lot of fun.
A special thanks to the Cranbury Township Public works department for doing a great job of getting things up and running for today.
Hopefully the weather will cooperate in the near term so we can all continue to enjoy the skating.
Fingers crossed for continued green flags.
-Dan
neighbor
Posted: Tue, Jan 25 2011, 2:06 pm EST
Post subject: Re: Brainerd Lake skating?
Anyone have size 6 women's skates and/or size 1 kids skates they'd be willing to sell?
Guest
Posted: Tue, Jan 25 2011, 1:36 pm EST
Post subject: Re: Brainerd Lake skating?
Township of Cranbury New Jersey
NOTICE TO ALL CRANBURY RESIDENTS
The Green Flag is up for skating on Brainerd Lake - Enjoy! Please be respectful of private property along the lake.
(www.CranburyTownship.org)
Guest
Posted: Tue, Jan 25 2011, 12:00 pm EST
Post subject: Re: Brainerd Lake skating?
LAKE IS OPEN
Guest
Posted: Mon, Jan 24 2011, 1:21 pm EST
Post subject: Re: Brainerd Lake skating?
Any info if the lake is going to open soon?? looks like they have a sign up and a gate up!
Guest
Posted: Thu, Jan 20 2011, 11:02 am EST
Post subject: Re: Brainerd Lake skating?
Some cold facts about ice
New ice is usually stronger than old ice. Four inches of clear, newly‑formed ice may support one person on foot, while a foot or more of old, partially‑thawed ice may not.
Ice seldom freezes uniformly. It may be a foot thick in one location and only an inch or two just a few feet away.
Ice formed over flowing water and currents is often dangerous. This is especially true near streams, bridges and culverts. Also, the ice on outside river bends is usually weaker due to the undermining effects of the faster current.
The insulating effect of snow slows down the freezing process. The extra weight also reduces how much weight the ice sheet can support. Also, ice near shore can be weaker than ice that is farther out.
Booming and cracking ice isn’t necessarily dangerous. It only means that the ice is expanding and contracting as the temperature changes.
Schools of fish or flocks of waterfowl can also adversely affect the relative safety of ice. The movement of fish can bring warm water up from the bottom of the lake. In the past, this has opened holes in the ice causing snowmobiles and cars to break through.
Guest
Posted: Thu, Jan 20 2011, 8:37 am EST
Post subject: Re: Brainerd Lake skating?
The TC stated at a meeting a month or so ago that they supported skating when the lake was a sufficient thickness according to what the insurance policy says it should be. They never said no skating on the lake.
However, with snow on the lake it makes it hard for the lake to freeze to a safe thickness.
Guest
Posted: Wed, Jan 19 2011, 8:14 pm EST
Post subject: Re: Brainerd Lake skating?
Guest wrote:
At this point bring a snorkel with you for when you fall in.
I do not see the lake ever being skated on again as the liability is too great for the Town.
Why has that changed in just a few years? They last allowed it, when sufficiently frozen, only 2-3 years ago if I recall.
Guest
Posted: Wed, Jan 19 2011, 7:21 pm EST
Post subject: Re: Brainerd Lake skating?
At this point bring a snorkel with you for when you fall in.
I do not see the lake ever being skated on again as the liability is too great for the Town.
Guest
Posted: Wed, Jan 19 2011, 5:51 pm EST
Post subject: Re: Brainerd Lake skating?
You will know when it time to skate when the township raises a green flag above the sidewalk facing the lake on Main St. They also fence off the section around the overflow drain where the ice gets thin because of the moving water.
Guest
Posted: Tue, Jan 18 2011, 8:12 pm EST
Post subject: Re: Brainerd Lake skating?
And snow, if it wasn't thick enough prior to the first snowfall, it won't open for skating. The best we could hope for is for the snow to melt and the lake to refreeze. I've also heard they're calling for another 4 - 8" Thursday into Friday, so It won't be happening soon.
Guest
Posted: Tue, Jan 18 2011, 7:57 pm EST
Post subject: Re: Brainerd Lake skating?
Curious wrote:
Has anyone heard anything? It seems like it's been pretty cold.
Not yet. If anything the rain would have weakened the ice.
Curious
Posted: Tue, Jan 18 2011, 6:17 pm EST
Post subject: Brainerd Lake skating?
Has anyone heard anything? It seems like it's been pretty cold.