Skip advert
Advertisement

Ice road trucking: opening of the icy Canadian highways

We visited Fiddler's Lake, Canada, to witness the opening of the Great White North ice road network

Canada is known as the Great White North. And with good reason. Out on Fiddler’s Lake in the Northwest Territories it is -20 degrees Celsius. With the wind it feels like -30. As far as the eye can see is snow and ice.

“This isn’t cold,” grins lake owner Blair Weatherby who, like other locals, drops the word minus. “Try 40!”

Advertisement - Article continues below

Blair is a second-generation ice road trucker, the most hardcore breed of truck drivers on the planet. Each winter they take 18-wheelers, carrying up to 100 tons of supplies, on the temporary roads carved out of frozen lakes and sub-Arctic tundra.

Auto Express winter car checklist

“Ice roads are the only way to get supplies to mines and communities,” he explains as we stand on 17 inches of newly-frozen ice. “Mines and communities are surrounded by lakes and permafrost so roads are hugely expensive. Ice roads are their lifeline each year.”

Seventeen inches is enough to support the 1,800kg Volkswagen Tiguans we’ve brought with us. Auto Express has come to Yellowknife in the Northwest Territories for the opening of 2018’s ice road network to understand how these ice roads that support the small communities work, and to take part in a special photo shoot. In a world first, a diver will photograph and film the Tiguans from under the carpet of frozen crystals.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

The original plan was to join the NWT Highways team as it opened the Dettah ice road four miles across Great Slave Lake (the world’s ninth biggest freshwater lake) to a nearby indigenous community. But warm weather held things up, so we’ve opted to build our own on Fiddler’s, where the ice has thickened enough to drive on. Just.

Advertisement - Article continues below

“The fact that we can see right through the ice, we know it’s good, strong, clear ice – it’s not cloudy, re-frozen snow – so it is strong enough for something like a Tiguan,” explains ice safety expert Adam Woogh. “There’s some formulas to calculate theoretical strength based on thickness. If the ice thickness doubles, the strength will quadruple. So we know that if we have, say, 15 inches of ice that’s not just three times as strong as five inches – it’ll be nine times as strong.”

Adam might be confident about the ice strength, but the local news has been full of stories of people and machinery falling through the ice, so unpredictable has it been this winter. We meet one miner who plummeted into the frigid water of Great Slave Lake when the ice gave way. “One second I was walking along, the next I was in the water. The shock was terrible,” he says. “But luckily I could pull myself out.”

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

To prepare the main ice roads, local highways chief Garry Snyder has the latest technology at his disposal, including tracked six-wheel amphibious Argocats which drag ground-penetrating radar behind them to show the ice and water depth. He is the one who tells us Dettah is not ready for the Tiguans.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Blair relies on proven, more analogue than digital, data. For a week or two before we arrive he’s drilled holes to measure Fiddler’s Lake’s ice thickness. Once it’s 12 inches (30cm) thick, he sent out a snowmobile to break down the snow blanketing, and insulating, the ice. That sped up the freeze. Next was a side-by-side quad with a snowplough attached, scraping away the snow to reveal bare ice. Our road surface.

Another three to four inches has formed as we arrive. Good enough to put a pick-up and snowplough on the ice to finesse the frozen road and prepare it for the final trick up the sleeve of an ice road maker: flooding the surface with a petrol-powered pump sucking lake water through a hole in the ice. The result; 17 inches of ice.

“Ice is only a bridge. If there’s no water under it, it won’t hold you up,” says Blair as we walk the new road. “The water’s what’s holding you up. And ice is a bridge holding you out of the water. All your pressure’s on that water, actually. We’re walking on water.”

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Driving a car on ice for the first time is unnerving. Especially ice barely a foot and a half thick. It is like driving on one of those trackways over a festival field. It’s solid, but not quite. For a start the ice pops and cracks as the tyres roll over it. That’s good, apparently. A sign of strength, Adam and Blair reassure us.

As the road has been finessed, diver Bill Coltart has been cutting a 1.5-metre triangular aperture in the ice – his man hole into the lake. On a section of the road he’s been pouring warm water on to the surface to clean the ice and create a window to film through.

“I’m sure no one has ever shot a car from under the ice,” he says, bobbing in the sub-Arctic water, kept alive only by a heated dive suit. He is connected to us with a lifeline. “Right now, I can see why.”

Winter driving tips

With that, Bill dives and swims to the polished ice window. There he is, only a foot or so beneath us, clear as day and ready for the Tiguan to drive over him and snap the first picture of a car driving on top of the ice. We’ve never seen any roads where you can do that.

Enjoyed this wintery feature? Then why not take a look at the best small 4x4s on sale designed to tackle tough terrains.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

Volkswagen ID.Every1 concept: entry-level ID.1 EV will ‘still feel like a Volkswagen’
Volkswagen ID.Every1 concept - front action

Volkswagen ID.Every1 concept: entry-level ID.1 EV will ‘still feel like a Volkswagen’

The Volkswagen ID.1 will arrive in 2027 and look to start below £20,000
News
23 Apr 2025
Volkswagen to extend its range with range-extender PHEVs for Europe
Volkswagen Touareg - front cornering

Volkswagen to extend its range with range-extender PHEVs for Europe

EV-lite range-extender technology could prolong the shelf-life of Volkswagen’s petrol engine offerings to 2030 and beyond
News
23 Apr 2025
Volkswagen to launch more than 30 new models in China by 2028
Volkswagen ID.Aura, Evo and Era unveiled at the Auto Shanghai motor show

Volkswagen to launch more than 30 new models in China by 2028

The ID. Aura compact saloon, plus the ID. ERA and ID. EVO SUVs, showcase new powertrain and autonomous driving technology
News
22 Apr 2025
Best new cars coming soon: all the big new car launches due in 2025, 2026 and beyond
Best new cars coming soon - header image

Best new cars coming soon: all the big new car launches due in 2025, 2026 and beyond

These are the most important new cars headed our way, from brands including Audi, BMW, Dacia, Ferrari, Ford, Skoda and more
Best cars & vans
8 Apr 2025

Most Popular

Leapmotor B05 family hatch on route to the UK with sub-£30k price and 400-mile range
Leapmotor badge

Leapmotor B05 family hatch on route to the UK with sub-£30k price and 400-mile range

The Stellantis-backed brand will launch a Volkswagen ID.3-rivalling small car with almost 20 per cent more range
News
23 Apr 2025
New Renault Clio prepares for launch: And it's not an EV
Renault Clio Mk6 (camouflaged) - front 3/4 tracking

New Renault Clio prepares for launch: And it's not an EV

The Clio isn’t going anywhere despite the reemergence of the Renault 5
News
22 Apr 2025
New Subaru Outback is “simply unsellable in Europe” for one very simple reason…
Subaru Outback front 2025

New Subaru Outback is “simply unsellable in Europe” for one very simple reason…

Subaru has confirmed that the new seventh-generation Outback will not be coming to the UK, or anywhere in Europe for that matter
News
23 Apr 2025