It is a beautiful spring day outside at Bear Lake. Everyone knows that spring begins next week
and they can't wait for the snow to leave and the green to appear. This will begin everywhere around us, but not
in the Bear Lake Valley. We have, as close
as I can estimate, 24,393,600 tons of
ice to melt. We are an icebox which will affect our temperatures and it is
going to take some time to turn the ice into water. This is especially true considering the lake
is covered with snow that reflects heat. In fact it is still making ice.
Ice pushed up around the shoreline |
If you travel along the shoreline you will see ice being
pushed up on shore. This is not due to
the wind or changing lake elevations but expansion. This action is actually very important to the
littoral zone of the lake. After years
of low water, dead trees and Pharagmites
in addition to sandbars and rocks are now encased in ice which is now
moving them up the shore.
Rocks and sand on their way back up the beach |
With that much ice mass nothing can
resist it. So when it melts, I
hope in April, things will look
different At this lake elevation a lot of strange things can still happen once the icebergs start banging around. When breakup get closer I
will talk about what happens then.
Goodbye trees |
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