Monday, February 08, 2016

Cars parked on frozen lake during warm weather suffered a watery fate

At least 10 cars have been written off after falling through the ice at Lake Geneva in Walworth County, Wisconsin. It happened during the annual Winterfest celebration, which draws thousands of people to the lake-front community. Despite warning signs, hundreds of cars park on the ice each year. This year, warm weather caused the ice to be unstable, sending 15 cars into the lake.





At least 10 are being deemed a total loss. One of those belongs to Laurie Oberhelman, who was visiting the festival for the first time. "We were coming in and there were a lot of cars and not a lot of parking spots, and we looked and I said oh look there's plenty of cars parked on the lake. People park on the lake all the time from what I understand so let's do it," she says. "It was a bad choice."





Renner Larson was there when it first started, and says the process happened very slowly. "As the ice bent downwards, water started coming up, and cars went in front-end first," he says. "Then water came up, and they slid in a little bit more." Dive teams worked to remove the cars one by one, as thousands gathered to watch the situation unfold.


YouTube link.

Police say nobody was injured, despite numerous people running to their cars as the ice caved in. "Fortunately it's only a property issue right now, and nobody was injured or in the vehicles when they started to submerge. So it's a bad day, but a good day at the same time," says Lt. Ed Gritzner. Signs are posted warning drivers to venture onto the ice at their own risk. Gritzner says the drivers of those vehicles will be responsible for all property damage.

2 comments:

Dunex said...

I'm going to be pissed if they receive any money from insurance.

Barbwire said...

Apropos of this and another post, I drove from our house on Lake Kegonsa to Lake Geneva when I was 11. My father was with me. He made me pass a written test on the workings of the internal combustion engine, identify everything under the hood, and change a tire before he taught me how to drive. I was as tall then as I am now, and nobody even noticed.