Ice fishing an inexpensive winter hobby, but ice safety is key | CTV News

2022-07-23 03:17:13 By : Ms. Lin Lin

On one of the coldest days along the St. Lawrence River in Cardinal, Ont., Dan Delorme and his brother-in-law Jamie Day are setting up their ice fishing hut on the Gallop Canal.

"I've fished here pretty much here my whole life and caught many kinds of fish and it's just a good way to get out," said Day. "Whether on a boat or on the ice, it's just good times."

In the thick of winter, ice fishing is a hobby that's not too expensive for beginners to break into.

"We were here about two weeks ago, and we had a tip up and two fishing rods setup," said Delorme. "I had an $8 spool of line with a $0.60 hook and a weight and it was attached to a stick. We caught all our fish on that stick that day."

"People have been fishing for thousands of years, the concept hasn't changed, you know," he added. "People are still fishing hook line and sinker. You can go from the extremely cheap to ridiculously expensive or anywhere in between."

Jamie Day fishes inside a hut on the St. Lawrence River in Cardinal, Ont. on Saturday. (Nate Vandermeer/CTV News Ottawa)

The recent cold snap provided about eight inches of ice where they set up for the day, using a propane heater inside an insulated hut to keep them cozy.

"Technology just makes it that much more comfortable now," Delorme said. "Everything is just a little bit easier than it was 15 years ago."

"Twenty years ago I'd be sitting on a bucket out in -20 in the wind," he said with a laugh.

While the cost of the hut and heater can range about $500, aside from a couple fishing rods, an auger and bait, you can be ready to fish.

"For me, it's made a huge difference," Delorme said. "The fact that i can go out and sit there for eight hours and enjoy my day and not have to worry about being out in the elements, it just makes my day that much more better."

OPP Const. Sean McCaffrey of the OPP S.A.V.E. Unit discusses ice safety in Merrickville, Ont. (Nate Vandermeer/CTV News Ottawa)

However, even on a bone chilling day with temperature feeling like -30, ice safety should always be a key priority for anyone heading out onto the ice.

"First of all, I have to say that no ice is safe ice, but there are general guidelines out there," said Const. Sean McCaffrey with the Ontario Provincial Police Snowmobile, ATV, Vessel Enforcement Unit (S.A.V.E.)

"The Ministry of Natural Resources suggest that four inches is your minimum for ice fishing," he added. "And if you're going, we do recommend that you do take some safety precautions, highly recommended is a survival or floatation suit of some sort, something that will help you float if you fall through."

With the recent snowfall in our area #LanarkOPP and @OceanWaveFire want to remind everyone that ice thickness is hard to judge when covered in fresh snow! Use caution before going out on any body of water in the winter @OPP_COMM_ER ^jt pic.twitter.com/EjHHCOu1w7

McCaffrey noted other items to pack include a compass, waterproof flashlight and matches and a change of clothes.

"We always recommend going with a buddy. If you are going out on the ice, tell someone where you are going, when you'll be back, what to do in case you don't return," McCaffrey said.

"The biggest thing is try to find out how much ice is out there," he added. "Talk to the local fishermen, know before you go, and again I go back to no ice is safe ice."

"Unless you physically look at the ice yourself, you drill through, then you know that one spot is good," he said. "Ten feet away, depending on current, wind, snow cover, it could be two inches, there is so many variables."

The recent snowfall can also act like an insulator, keeping sections of ice at varying levels of thickness.

"Every year, unfortunately, there's several people that do go through and we do our best to help them," he said.

"Overall, it's generally a safe sport if you know what you're doing and you are prepared, but if you're not prepared or if you don't know what you are doing, you can easily get into trouble," McCaffrey said.

Delorme says even with four inches of ice, he waits for it to be thicker before heading out onto any body of water.

"I usually wait to see people out on the ice and know it's safe and then I'll go out and once I cut my hole. I'll see exactly what's there," he said. "Then I'll know what I have."

"If you can find the ice and you can get out on the St. Lawrence, you can do fairly well," he added. "This is our third time out this year and last time we were out we got two pike a couple small perch."

Delorme says to make sure you have an updated fishing licence as well when doing any sort of fishing.

"We go every chance we can get now and this year we're going to start looking for spots we've never been to. That's part of the adventure," he said.

While it was a slow morning with just a couple of bites, both men say that's how the hobby goes.

"It's just another option to get outside in the winter," Delorme said. "Even when it's -30!"

Two of Canada's men's world junior hockey teams are being investigated by police following alleged group sexual assaults in 2003 and 2018.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he's concerned sports organizations are not fulfilling their responsibility to keep athletes safe, and groups like Hockey Canada and Gymnastics Canada have work to do to restore trust and assure parents their children are taken care of.

Testimony has ended in the trial of a former Vancouver Canucks forward charged with sexual assault.

A Conservative committee reviewing Patrick Brown's disqualification from the leadership race has concluded the party had the evidence it needed to recommend he be removed from contention.

Frustrations are mounting as reports of lost and delayed baggage at Canada's airports pile up. On CTVNews.ca, passengers share their stories of spending weeks, even months, waiting to be reunited with their checked baggage.

The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) says it identified a technical glitch with the ArriveCAN entry app that erroneously notified some people to quarantine.

Steve Bannon, a longtime ally of former U.S. president Donald Trump was convicted Friday of contempt charges for defying a congressional subpoena from the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

The Canadian government will increase old age security starting next week, a move the feds say will be the first permanent raise to the pension in nearly 50 years.

A dispute over legal protections for American customs officers has kept Nexus enrolment centres closed in Canada more than three months after they reopened south of the border -- due in part to a clash over U.S. agents' right to carry guns on Canadian soil.

The MV Holiday Island ferry was evacuated Friday afternoon after a fire broke out in the engine room earlier in the day.

The senior RCMP officer in the district where the Nova Scotia mass shooting occurred says he stayed home during the rampage because having a "white shirt" present at the command post would have caused confusion.

The number of people with COVID-19 in Maritime hospitals this summer continues to climb, with more week-to-week increases in New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island.

A man is in hospital with serious injuries after he was struck by a streetcar on St. Clair Avenue West in Toronto on Friday night.

Experts say there may be a chance to catch the northern lights in some parts of Ontario tonight, but there’s still some uncertainty.

Kiki Jones has spent the past few days taking cold showers, avoiding physical activity, keeping the blinds shut and blasting electric fans in their non-air-conditioned apartment in Toronto.

A 14-year-old girl drowned Friday at the Super Aqua Club in Pointe-Calumet, Que., in the Laurentians.

An explosion at a polymer research centre in Greater Montreal left one dead and three injured Friday morning.

Montreal's transit agency announced Friday that its new CEO is Marie-Claude Leonard, a 30-year veteran employee who started working there as an STM cashier when she was a student.

As of July 28, children aged five and under are eligible to get the COVID-19 vaccine.

Instead of its usual Italian Festival, the Marconi Cultural Event Centre is expanding the event to encompass other cultures.

Canada’s longest-running match play golf tournament is back. The 74th annual Idylwylde Invitational features some of the top golfers in the province.

The London Police Service is investigating after a serious vehicle collision claimed the life of a pedestrian late Friday afternoon in the south end of the city.

London police say a body has been found in an open field.

An overnight road closure on Highway 401 is now clear after police say a transport truck collided with a maintenance truck being used to protect crews painting lines on the road.

It's usually a popular place to cool down on a hot summer day at a North Kildonan apartment complex but no one was in the water Friday after an emergency Thursday afternoon at its outdoor swimming pool.

The Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak along with Mathias Colomb Cree Nation said they are looking for a woman who they believe was abducted in Winnipeg.

Lac du Bonnet RCMP are investigating a potential drowning in the Winnipeg River.

New data shows even though the average home price is coming down, higher stress tests driven by increasing mortgage rates mean the annual income you need to buy a home is actually going up in Kitchener and many Canadian cities.

The Waterloo Region District Public School Board has offered few public details about what it’s calling the “cyber incidents” that impacted its IT system, but one cyber security expert says the breach is concerning.

The COVID-19 assessment centre on Holiday Inn Drive in Cambridge is closing this weekend as staff are redeployed to Cambridge Memorial Hospital.

Tempers are flaring as another health care facility in Alberta starts two months of temporary closures.

One person died and two others were injured Friday when a vehicle rolled over on Bow Trail

Turner Valley RCMP are investigating after three plaques were stolen from a Little Chicago-Royalties monument on the Longview Rodeo Grounds off Highway 22 in Foothills County.

The city is left footing the bill after a Saskatoon bridge was damaged in a hit-and-run earlier this year.

With less than six months of experience, a Prince Albert Paramedic has delivered two babies already, and he has a special connection with the most recent baby he helped deliver.

As gas prices rise in Alberta, the premier says he's going to ask Canada's competition bureau to investigate potential price fixing in the province.

Residential school survivors from the Samson Cree Nation held a press conference on Thursday ahead of Pope Francis' visit to Alberta next week.

Police are looking for a man who stole a Rolex watch and hit one of the sellers with his vehicle during a Kijiji sale gone wrong earlier this month.

Mounties are looking for a man accused of murder who they say is unlawfully at large after he left the North Fraser Pre-Trial Centre in Port Coquitlam, B.C.

A long-range plan meant to help shape Vancouver's future, which includes controversial renter protections, has been approved by city council.

Testimony has ended in the trial of a former Vancouver Canucks forward charged with sexual assault.

The Pope may not be visiting Saskatchewan on his national apology tour, but that doesn’t mean some of the provinces’ residential school survivors won’t be seeing him.

Community fridges are struggling to keep their shelves stocked as food insecurity continues to be a prevalent issue in Regina.

Southey RCMP have released a sketch of the suspect in an alleged sexual assault of a preteen child in Govan, Sask.

© 2022 All rights reserved. Use of this Website assumes acceptance of Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy