The Columbus Dispatch

Resort relishes ice-harvesting tradition

- By Michael Casey

HOLDERNESS, N.H. — Modern refrigerat­ors have little appeal for summer guests at a rustic New Hampshire resort who prefer cooling their bottles of water, soda and beer the old-fashioned way.

The preparatio­n begins five months ahead of time, when resort staffers and volunteers gather to harvest ice from nearby Squam Lake. The January ritual dates back to 1897, when RockywoldD­eephaven Camps first opened in the town of Holderness, and is practiced for commercial purposes only at a handful of other places in the country.

The group, equipped with chain saws, ice picks and a huge saw on a sled, can harvest 200 tons of ice over several days in a typical winter. They transport the ice to two storage sheds on the campground­s, where it’s kept until the summer. Then, staffers with wheelbarro­ws provide the ice to resort guests, who place it in an antique icebox — some dating back to the 1930s with oak exteriors and a tin or zinc lining — to keep beverages and snacks cold. Guests are told not to eat the ice, though some old-timers apparently still put a few shards in their cocktails.

“Many of the families have been coming for generation­s, and people who come here don’t like to see much change. They like it to be a simple, quiet place,” said John Jurczynski, the co-general manager of RockywoldD­eephaven Camps for the past 29 years and who oversees the ice harvest. A push to bring in electrical refrigerat­ors in the 1960s was rebuffed by guests.

“It’s such a neat tradition. People love it,” he said.

For weeks, Jurczynski had been putting out bulletins about ice conditions on Squam Lake. By mid-january, the word went out. The ice had finally reached a safe thickness — in this case about 13 inches — and the harvest could begin.

Once workers cleared the snow and charted a grid, the cutting started and whining sounds of saws echoed across the lake.

Workers mostly use a contraptio­n called an ice saw — with a huge blade mounted on a sled — to make the cuts. The 16-inch-by-19-inch chunks weighing as much as 120 pounds look like huge pieces of cake with a powdery top and a clear body with bubbles. The blocks are pried loose with the help of chain saws, and a line of workers with ice pikes float them along a chute. They are then pushed up a ramp and into a truck for a trip to the storage facilities.

When it’s all done, the group collects as many as 3,600 blocks of ice.

 ?? [ROBERT F. BUKATY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Ice-harvesting tools rest against ice blocks as a crew works to harvest ice from Squam Lake at the Rockywold-deephaven Camps in Holderness, N.H.
[ROBERT F. BUKATY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Ice-harvesting tools rest against ice blocks as a crew works to harvest ice from Squam Lake at the Rockywold-deephaven Camps in Holderness, N.H.

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