Jerry Ness has driven across Medicine Lake every winter for most of his 72 years so he was taken aback Thursday when Hennepin County sheriff's deputies barricaded the ice road and posted the "Road Closed" sign.
For the first time in decades, Hennepin County is banning cars, trucks and SUVs from all of its 104 named lakes and other bodies of water. Unseasonably warm weather and unpredictable ice conditions have plunged eight vehicles into the water since mid-January -- six in the past seven days.
Across the state, four people have died this year after falling through the ice. None of the fatalities were in Hennepin County but "there's been a couple of close calls," said Lisa Kiava, the sheriff's spokeswoman.
"The ice condition varies. It's a foot in some places and then you go a few feet and it's a thin veneer," she said. "There's no rhyme or reason to it."
Snowmobiles and ATVs will continue to be allowed on the lakes.
Cold-loving Minnesotans have been frustrated by this winter that isn't.
"Oh my gosh, this is the goofiest winter ever, as far as ice conditions, that I can remember in my 30 years with the DNR," said Tim Smalley, water safety specialist with the Department of Natural Resources. "I bought a new snowblower this fall, and then we get no snow."
Balmy temperatures and a dearth of snow have canceled winter festivals and cross-country ski races in one of the state's warmest winters on record. Ice rinks come and go. And nary a snowman can be found.