READS LANDING, MINN. – In the teeth of a harsh northwest wind lashing across the barren white expanse otherwise known as Lake Pepin, Al VanGuilder and Bill Chelmowski are looking for spring.
Technically, this U.S. Army Corps of Engineers crew is taking its first measurements in its annual ice survey of this key stretch of the Mississippi River, trying to get an inkling for when the first towboat might break through to St. Paul to open the navigation season. So, yes, undeniably, by extension they are also looking for a glimmer of spring.
Forget the groundhog's shadow; this is science.
"The first towboat to reach St. Paul is kind of a big deal," said Patrick Moes, spokesman for the Corps. "It's the first sign of spring. Especially this year, we could really use it."
The survey is part of the Corps' task of maintaining and monitoring the river's navigation system, which is vital to the Upper Midwest's economy. The weekly results are tracked by river shippers eager to get to work for the new season.
Nearly 5.5 million tons of commodities passed through Twin Cities river terminals in 2012, much of which was grain — 60 percent of the nation's exported grains are shipped on the Mississippi. From southerly river ports, commodities like gravel, fertilizer, salt, cement, and coal also make their way to Minnesota.
Usually, the survey crew is out on the lake by mid-February — in 2013, the first measurement was taken on Feb. 13, exactly two weeks earlier than this year. To those anxious to ditch winter's bitter chill, that might be the first discouraging clue about what this year's ice foretells.
"We're expecting to see a lot of ice thicknesses at levels that we've never seen before," said VanGuilder, a supervising civil engineering technician who has been measuring the ice for the past 16 springs.