Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - February 24, 2014, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A6
T HE ice- road trucker pulls hard on the
straps securing 21 tonnes of pipes and
lumber to a flatbed and pops the hood
on his rig for a final check. Then Kelly Ring
offers a comment so obvious, even he had to
smile: " These roads take a lot out of these
trucks."
Ring has been hauling
building materials to
northern Manitoba for
four years and making
a living out of one of the
most dangerous jobs in
the province.
A quiet man with a
laid- back, easygoing
nature, Ring has clocked
thousands of kilometres
driving into the teeth
of the polar vortex this winter. He's living
inside his cab, and last week he left Winnipeg
on his 11th run, destined for Garden Hill
First Nation.
" It's better than last year, much better.
Looks like ( Manitoba Infrastructure and
Transportation) is doing a good job," Ring
tells a reporter. " The roads are smoother,
wider and they've put in some bridges now...
they've moved out some of the boulders. They
used to destroy trucks."
One thing that jumps out as Ring readies
his rig for the frozen north: He's not wearing
boots. His choice of footwear is sneakers,
not Sorels. There's a reason: If you break
through the ice, boots will weigh you down,
maybe even drown you. He doesn't even
bother to mention it.
" We'll stop for something to eat and head
out," Ring said, heading over to his buddy in
a second semi that will make up his twotruck
convoy.
This trip, one of about 25 Ring will make
this season, will take him and his buddy on a
convoy of two about 1,000 kilometres round
trip, five days into the northern bush and
back to their base at Polar Industries in Winnipeg.
They'll take a long way around, from
Norway House on an ice road, then north to
Oxford House, then back south to Garden
Hill. There is no other way.
By Sunday, the pair had run into a hitch,
Ring's boss reported.
" Last I heard, they were stuck yesterday
morning north of Red Sucker Lake junction,"
Polar Industries president Mark Kohaykewych
relayed.
" Snow conditions have plugged the roads
up. Guys getting stuck everywhere. Ontario
is horrible right now. I have six guys out
there that are crawling or at a standstill."
Apart from the snow, Manitoba's winter
roads are in great shape, the gift of - 40 C day
after day early in the season that flash- froze
the north.
Up north, snow is a hazard, ice an ally. A
thick blanket softens ice, and that can sink a
semi so deep in muskeg it's like quicksand.
But on ice, a dynamic called " the wave"
can crack an ice road and swallow a truck
whole unless a driver knows what to do. The
wave is the result of the weight of the trucks
on the ice.
The only way past the wave is to keep it
ahead of you. Shorelines are the tricky part.
Waves hit the land, and if you're slow and
easy at the wheel, you'll surf over it and
safely top the bank, even with a full load.
Manitoba decommissioned a stretch of
winter road four years ago when melt after
melt turned a so- so link to Pauingassi into a
mud pit.
Since then, a Manitoba Conservation priority
to protect caribou has also served to spare
truckers a frozen kind of hell that melts into
slush without warning.
This year, Manitoba Infrastructure and
Transportation has manned snowplows up
and down the east side of Lake Winnipeg
nearly 24/ 7 to beat back the melt.
" MIT is working around the clock to blow
the great amount of snow and keep the roads
safe for us," Kohaykewych said.
Every stick of lumber, every pound of
butter going into the north relies on the
province's 2,300- kilometre ice- road network,
which is open an average of eight weeks a
year.
" By comparison, we're a little bit better
than last year by a few days," said Larry
Halayko, the director of contract services for
MIT. " We had about a half a week head start
compared to last year, but when we're talking
about an eight- week season, that's a lot."
There are two kinds of commercial freight
on Manitoba's ice roads. The first is the kind
that Kelly does, which is hauling building materials.
That is a drama that draws cameras
and film crews from TV series such as Ice
Road Truckers .
The second is about food, rifles, couches
and snowmobiles.
" We use the roads extensively. We have 16
communities tied to winter roads, with stores
in each of them," said Pat Jacob, inland
region general manager for the Northwest
Company, the corporate parent for the Northern
Stores.
That network is as much a lifeline for the
north - and a lightning rod for complaints -
as winter roads themselves.
The province's winter- road network is the
only road link to the south for dozens of First
Nations and small towns that dot the muskeg
and hug the north's many lakes and rivers.
" This year, it's been great," Jacob said. " We
opened up for heavy traffic a week to 10 days
earlier than last year, and last year was a
good year. This one is even better."
Two years ago, the frigid cold never arrived
this far south. This year, the polar vortex
pinned the continent down from Hudson
Bay to the Gulf of Mexico. Between the two
extremes, the province is steering a future
course away from ice roads.
Ernie Gilroy, the boss of the East Side Road
Authority, sees the day when winter roads
are history, at least on the east side of Lake
Winnipeg.
By this fall, the first stretch of all- season
road between Hollow Water and Bloodvein
First Nations will have its official grand
opening.
" The idea is we're going to convert most of
the winter roads to pioneer roads, which is a
lower standard than gravel roads, but over
time they will be converted to use all season
round," Gilroy said.
alexandra. paul@ freepress. mb. ca
A 4 WINNIPEG FREE PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2014 MANITOBA winnipegfreepress. com
730 Archibald
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All- season
roads replace
winter routes
MANITOBA is two years into a massive
project to build all- season roads out of
winter roads in the north. The $ 3- billion
project will take 30 years and cover 1,028
kilometres.
The province has committed $ 75 million
per year for the next 15 years. It hopes
Ottawa will pony up the rest as the federal
government eyes progress on the megaproject.
The province created the East Side Road
Authority to spearhead the construction
and in 2015, the Crown agency will take
over hundreds of kilometres of winter roads
running across the wilderness on the east
side of Lake Winnipeg as part of a plan to
transform them into all- weather roads.
Here's an update on where they're at so
far:
. Work has started on a 68- kilometre gravel
road between Bloodvein and Berens River
First Nations.
. Three new bridges and 40 kilometres
of new road between Hollow Water and
Bloodvein are done. Weather permitting,
Bloodvein First Nation is scheduled to have
all- season road access this fall once the
Bloodvein River Bridge is done.
. Farther north, East Side invested about
$ 17 million in improvements on the eastwest
all- season road alignment between
Norway House and the Island Lake region.
Three bridges span Mainland River, Stevenson
River and Feather Rapids.
. So far, the road- building has created more
than 500 jobs in the north, including 250
training positions.
- source: East Side Road Authority
Rigs ride risky lifeline of north
Truckers brave
snow, ice and ' wave'
to supply reserves
ALEXANDRA
PAUL
SCAN PAGE
TO SEE MAPS OF
WINTER ROAD
NETWORK AND
PROPOSED
ALL- SEASON
ROAD NETWORK
NASA IMAGE
Some years, the freeze- up comes
late, shortening the winter- road
season. Other winters, such as this
one, the polar vortex lays a deep
freeze across North America. A
persistent pattern of winds spins
high above the Arctic in winter.
The winds, known as the polar
vortex, typically blow in a fairly
tight circular formation. But in late
December 2013 and early January
2014, the winds loosened and frigid
Arctic air spread out, freezing
Manitoba's north and shattering
low- temperature records in the
United States.
WAYNE GLOWACKI / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Trucker Kelly Ring checks his rig in Winnipeg last week before hauling building supplies to Garden Hill First Nation. It's a 1,000- kilometre round trip over treacherous ice roads.
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