Canadian officials rescue 23 people who floated away on ice sheet

A perilous situation on Lake Huron culminated in a dramatic aerial rescue operation Sunday afternoon, as Ontario Provincial Police coordinated the evacuation of twenty-three individuals from a disintegrating ice sheet. The emergency unfolded near Owen Sound, approximately 200 kilometers northwest of Toronto, when unexpectedly strong winds and currents detached a massive ice shelf from the shoreline, carrying the group approximately two kilometers into open waters.

The crisis began around noon local time when recreational ice fishermen suddenly found themselves adrift on a rapidly fracturing ice floe. Kevin Fox, one of the stranded anglers, recounted the terrifying moment of realization when his GPS device indicated movement across the lake’s surface. ‘I turned around and saw waves forming behind us,’ Fox documented on social media, describing the immediate panic that ensued.

As the ice continued to break into smaller fragments, multiple victims became partially submerged in the freezing waters while desperately seeking stable sections of the disintegrating platform. Some resorted to making emotional farewell calls to family members, anticipating the worst outcome as their situation grew increasingly dire.

Two helicopter crews executed a complex multi-trip extraction mission under challenging high-wind conditions, successfully retrieving all twenty-three individuals from the unstable ice formation. Several victims required medical attention for hypothermia symptoms following their prolonged exposure to freezing temperatures, though all are expected to make full recoveries.

Police officials praised the coordinated response, emphasizing the critical importance of situational awareness for winter recreational activities. This incident echoes a similar rescue operation recently conducted in Vermont’s Lake Champlain, highlighting the inherent dangers of unstable ice conditions during seasonal transition periods.