The Icelandic connection - 01.09.2010, Blaðsíða 15

The Icelandic connection - 01.09.2010, Blaðsíða 15
Vol. 63 #2 ICELANDIC CONNECTION 65 Then it was time to go back to the island, courtesy of the boys and their dog teams. They now travelled north of the area where the ice had broken away a few days before. Shortly after noon they arrived back on their little island and were wel- comed heartily by everyone there. “Where are Einar and Bergur?” Johann asked. The fishermen told them the story of what had happened when they realized that the ice had broken apart. They were all sure that Johann and Laurence had most certainly been killed in the ensuing breakup. His brothers, along with several others, had formed a search party and gone immediately to the east shore on the unbroken ice. They were hoping to meet Johann and Laurence somewhere along the shore or perhaps find their bodies thrown up by the high winds. The search party had not been seen since. While Johann and Laurence had been at the Poplar River store, Einar and Bergur and the other searchers had turned south along the lakeshore to look for them, so their paths never crossed. Later that day the party came to where the bro- ken ice was piled up on the shore, having been driven there by the high winds. In some places it had completely covered the trees on the shoreline. It was obvious to them that no one could have survived the devastation that they observed. So, with heavy hearts they made themselves ready for the return trip to the island. Because they had two excellent dog teams, the trip home to the island took only a few hours. The dogs knew that they were heading home, so they kept up a rapid pace and seemed quite willing to get to the island in a hurry. As the party approached the island the heaviness in the men’s hearts became unbearable. They would have to tell everyone the sad news that they had found no sign of Johann and Laurence and presumed that they had died somewhere along the east shore where their bodies most certainly would have been thrown up by the storm. As they neared the cabins, they were met by some of the fishermen who happi- ly informed them of the arrival, earlier that day of Johann and Laurence and how, three days before, they had escaped almost certain death. They also told them of their rescuers, the boy trappers from Poplar River who had helped them get back to the island. When they entered the main cabin there were many tears of joy shed and everyone listened to Johann and Laurence tell of their adventure on the lake. Later, the cooks happily prepared a very fine meal in celebration of their escape from the claws of the storm. It was getting very late when the men went to their beds. The excitement of the past few days and how fortunately every- thing had turned out left all the fishermen in high spirits. Before everyone fell asleep they thanked God for his mercy on their friends Johann and Laurence. The next few weeks were a bit more normal, weatherwise, and the island fish- ermen began fishing in earnest as the ice thickened and became more stable. As the winter dragged on, some of the men became tired of the isolation and hitched a ride south to civilization with the fish freighters, whose horse-drawn sleighs moved the winters’ catch south to the nearest railhead, Riverton. Often, these men would then find employment in the districts adjoining the lake or simply go back to their families’ farms for the rest of the winter. Some of the others stayed on even after the fishing ceased and worked at filling the ice hous- es for the summer season when the catch was packed in ice and moved south by boat. They also cut firewood for next winter’s fishing season.

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