Size matters

(S. Calhoun Smith, Ice Boating.1962.)

Some of us may be limited in our lifestyles, ie by not having storage room, or a car/truck big enough to haul our toys, or the size of our bank accounts. When it comes to ice fun, you don’t have to, “Go big or go home!” Whenever I could borrow my dad’s book, Ice Boating, by S. Calhoun Smith, I was drawn to these little guys. This looked about the right size for me, a ten year old, at the time. My dad was too busy building his rig, (see post First Ride) so I never mention the Icebird to him as a project. However being an aficionado of the unusual, this small craft was always in the back of my mind. Somewhere along the line I acquired a crude set of plans and in my adulthood built the, “Ironing Board” as my wife used to call it. I can’t say that it had many long distant voyages, but it was always an attraction when set up.

Obviously I took some leeway with the design, but it would still scoot around the ice fairly well. The size was agreeable to just chucking it into the van and the weight such that my wife or young children could easily haul it to the ice. It only took 10 minutes to set up and the fun began. It provided the wonderful experience of, “first ride” to all who asked although maybe not the adrenaline rush of bigger boats.

A few years later while freezing myself on Moosehead Lake with beautiful black ice and temperatures that never made it above zero degrees, that’s Fahrenheit for clarification, I met a fellow DNer who came up from New Jersey with his mother and……her Icebird. Although this was a while back, I believe there is still an active class of these that when ice happens, they gather. As we all know, the definition of a race is, “two boats on the same lake”. Naturally if I had one and another one showed up here in the lakes region oh NH, I’m sure we would sail up next to one another and…………? I might need to check my parts stock and piece together one of these for poops and giggles. Maybe even try for the Hardway record as the smallest craft.

Fun is fun, no matter what the size. Think ice.

2 responses

  1. dhoder hoderassociates.com's avatar
    dhoder hoderassociates.com

    Yes, There is an active fleet in Red Bank and Long Branch, NJ. I am the fleet Captain for these boats in Red Bank and most of us have Super Birds which are a little bigger, with a sail designed an built by Henry Bosset. I am in Maine right now and leaving my four ice boats here, but bringing the ice bird back to Red Bank tomorrow. Cheers.

    David J Hoder Sent from my IPad

    01/07/2024 at 6:53 pm

    • Charlie Silfvenius's avatar
      Charlie Silfvenius

      Thanks for the update on the fleet. Another reader sent me a set of plans. I know the Skimmers are making a comeback. May this class will catch on up here. Hope you had a good sail in Maine. Just did a road test on my new trailer so should be ready. This snow may start the freeze on home ice.

      01/07/2024 at 7:01 pm