Arlington man shows why people shouldn't be skating on local ponds
Arlington Police report a local man fell through the ice on Spy Pond this afternoon as he and his wife skated about 100 yards offshore. He was rescued and taken to a local hospital for treatment of hypothermia.
Rescuers found the 68-year-old Arlington man holding onto a piece of broken, he was conscious and alert but in serious danger. The man's wife was also out on the ice, trying to assist him. The two had been skating together.
Arlington Police Officer Michael Foley was the first on scene, and he provide a length of rope for the man to hold on to. Shortly afterward, firefighters arrived wearing water rescue suits. A firefighter jumped in the water to assist, and the Arlington Fire Department Water Rescue Sled was deployed across the ice out to the skater. Firefighters used the sled to bring the man back to the shore.
The skater and his wife were both treated for hypothermia by firefighters, and they were both transported to Mount Auburn Hospital. Both are expected to recover fully.
Though temperatures have been on the colder side recently, Arlington officials warn that, at this time, it has not been cold enough for long enough to make it safe to walk, skate or fish on the ice in any waterway in Arlington.
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Comments
Did you mean Spy Pond?
Spy Pond is in Arlington. Spot Pond is in Stoneham.
Yes, Spy Pond
Thanks for, well, spotting that. Fixed.
Broken …?
Probably in original …
This couple should be charged
This couple should be charged for their rescue.
For what
Having fun?
Stupidity
Another one in Westboro, too
Ordinary vs gross?
Are you familiar with the concept of ordinary vs gross negligence?
Do you really want to live in the kind of world in which, let's say you were injured in a car accident, and it turned out you were driving 56 in a 55 zone, that you would be charged for the fire and EMS response, because, after all, you were negligent?
Or, if your house were to burn, that you would be charged for the fire department response if it turned out that you had any safety code violations (which I can pretty much guarantee that everyone has)?
There you go with your facts again
Remember: you are responding to and trying to reason with a commenter who thinks that people should be charged for their rescue if they don't understand the conditions in the pond that they are skating on, yet attacks other posters who do understand those conditions and can explain why they are hazardous.
SO you are wrong if you are ignorant, and reviled if you are not.
Trolls will be trolls.
Go shallow
Skating outside is a great joy, but Spy pond is deep enough to land a water plane on and has currents that increase entropy.
There are many places around that are ankle deep, but still have lovely skating ice. Not only are they more likely to be frozen solid, but you just get cold wet ankles if you fall through. When we lived in Arlington we skated on the reservoir swimming zone - like 6 inches deep.
No one likes a know it all.
No one likes a know it all.
Kindly knock it off
No one likes a troll.
Excellent smack down
Adam, I would have perma-banned Murkin for this outburst. You are truly a benevolent ruler and we are fortunate to have you.
Murkin, we will await your apology to Swirlygrrl.
If stating a simple fact
If stating a simple fact makes me a troll then I must live under a bridge.
Oh...
You do, sport. You do.
Lagoon in the Garden … later this week maybe?
A reason I like the Lagoon in the Public Garden. No flow, so it will freeze even downtown And 3' deep so if you fall in, the worst you get is cold legs.
Brackish water
I'd expect it to freeze a lot less reliably than fresh water.
Brackish?
Is the water that comes out of your tap brackish? That's the same water that's in the lagoon at the BPG - Boston municipal tap water. It gets refilled from a faucet every spring after its annual draining in late winter (and then gets topped off regularly from the same faucet); the valve is at the SE corner.
Semi-brackish
You're not accounting for the mineral content of duck piss. With all that loss of pure H20 through evaporative surface, I'd imagine it's pretty concentrated by the end of the season.
Are you thinking of the
Are you thinking of the lagoon on the Esplanade?
Yes
Yes - obviously not reading closely. Of course that thing in the Public Garden isn't a lagoon no matter what they named it, but..
Esplanade lagoon is part of the Charles River
So, it has currents. I would never recommend skating or walking on it.
Don't mention currents
Sheesh. Nobody likes a knowitall
We just don't have deep
We just don't have deep freeze winters like we used to. When you get good pond ice, like I did at Redd's Pond in Marblehead last New Year's Day, it is glorious fun.
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