I spudded my pond out today to see if it was safe for me to fish it tonight. There is about an inch and a half of snow on top of the ice, which came last week prior to the deep freeze that we had. At that time the edges were open about a foot out and there was about 2" of ice about 5' out.
Today I spudded 3-4" of mostly clear black ice under the snow, but noticed that when the spud hit about 2", it would go through and the ice would break out from the bottom, if that makes sense. I spudded my way out to the center of the pond with the same results. OK, 4" seemed safe enough. Came back to the house, loaded the Scout and headed back. First hole I drilled with a 6" Lazer, 6 turns and through, but the dang thing didn't want to come out of the hole very easy. I noticed the drilled hole was like the spudded holes... go down about 2", then the ice just breaks out underneath. You could see chunks of ice under the ice around the hole.
Being pretty new to ice fishing, I've never seen anything like this. I checked and couldn't see where there was a separation between two layers of ice, it seemed solid throughout the entire 4". Anyone seen this before, and how safe is this type of ice?
I spent 3 hours on it with the Scout, pretty light load, and didn't experience any sagging or any excess water coming up through the hole.
Thanks in advance,
Jeff