The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Freezy riders: Motorcycli­sts stay cool to race frozen lakes

- By Michael Hill

NORTHVILLE, N.Y. » They kick-start their bikes during cold snaps, hit highway speeds on ice and take tight turns on studded tires, leaving crystallin­e clouds in their wake.

Call them freezy riders, motorcycle racers who seem to defy physics — and maybe common sense — by buzzing around slick tracks plowed out atop frozen lakes and rivers each winter.

“The adrenaline of going 70 mph and dragging across the ice is something you can’t find anywhere else,” Mike Parodi says after another run around Great Sacandaga Lake in the Adirondack­s during a particular­ly bitter cold weekend this month. “Believe it or not, at 18 below, it actually doesn’t feel that bad.”

The riders on upstate New York ice this winter are butchers, contractor­s, maintenanc­e workers, fathers and sons. Some compete for money, with firstprize purses of up to $500 on a recent race day. But most are amateurs, who put thrills and bravado above the ever-present risk of spinning out and slipping sideways across the ice.

“It’s a lot easier on your body when you fall. You just kind of slide out. On dirt, you tumble, cartwheel. You can really get hurt,” says Johnny Gocha, among the more than 90 racers who competed recently on an oval track plowed atop the 14-inch thick ice on Warner Lake near Albany.

Racers ride dirt bikes with special screws in the tire treads. Sharp heads on the screws allow riders to hit fast straightaw­ay speeds and turn without sliding into snowbanks.

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