News item: DNR conservation officer Anthony Bermel of Babbitt last week observed on a local lake that "some brave souls were out fishing on very thin ice."
Steve Pennaz is a winter angler who has broken through thin ice and lived to tell about it.
He dunked himself into frigid water on purpose, for a segment on his TV show, "Stone Cold Fishing," which is broadcast on Fox Sports North, among other regional networks.
A well-known Minnesota angler who will be inducted into the Freshwater Fishing Hall of Fame in March at the Northwest Sportshow, Pennaz was curious about how much, or how little, effort would be required to pull himself onto solid ice after breaking through.
Information gleaned from the experience might also come in handy personally, he figured, because in winter he spends a lot of time on frozen lakes and rivers, fishing — and has for many cold-weather seasons.
A couple of decades back, for example, Pennaz won the U.S. National Ice Fishing Championship. He also was a member of the U.S. squad that competed in the first-ever World Ice Fishing Championships in Finland in 1990 (U.S. anglers won the bronze medal).
Pennaz also can recall a time some years back when he was on Mille Lacs in winter and watched a pickup and then a car go through the ice.
This occurred about halfway between shore and where he and his brother were fishing at the time — the same route they needed to follow to reach land.