Max Westerberg fished on thin ice in his younger years without a second thought, once crashing into waist-deep water on West Rush Lake in Chisago County.
His core body temperature plunged while he scrambled to escape the icy water. In a panic, he ran to a random house for help. Lucky for him, the homeowner was there to open the door.
Such was the life of a self-described Hard Water Zombie before safety was much of a concern.
Westerberg coined the term after graduating from Cambridge-Isanti High School in 2005 and spending countless hours on the ice with friend Shane Schluck and other fishing zealots. Together they formed a popular Minnesota fishing page on Facebook while clinging to an edgy style that gave the "Zombies'' a reputation for fearlessness on the ice.
Thirteen months ago, two key members of the group drowned during a November outing on Upper Red Lake. The Beltrami County Sheriff's Office determined that the anglers got lost in the night darkness and drove their four-wheeler into a two-acre swath of open water.
Suddenly gone were Melissa Marie Seidenstricker, 29, of Princeton, and Zeth Knyphausen, 28, of Stacy.
"It changed us. Period,'' Westerberg said. "You lose a couple of your closest friends and you think about it every time you go out on the ice.''
Reanimated
The Zombies have absorbed the pain and reanimated themselves around safety. Their Hard Water Zombies Fishing page on Facebook has grown to more than 7,800 members and Westerberg is prepping for the group's first T-shirt and sweatshirt sales. All proceeds will get poured back into the Zombies community and safety campaigns — possibly including a giveaway of ice picks, for anglers to use to pull themselves out of the water during mishaps.