DNR officer saves drowning ice fisherman Friday

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OSCEOLA, Iowa — State Conservation Officer Michael Miller was on routine patrol late Friday morning when he saw two men setting up an ice fishing shelter on West Lake Osceola in southern Iowa.

“I saw them out there,” Miller said, “and yelled ‘how much ice are you on?’ and they said ‘three inches.’ I told them to get off the ice immediately.”

He said one angler made it safely off the ice, but the other broke through about 10 yards from shore.

Miller said he grabbed his throw bag from his vehicle, through it to the man in the lake and pulled him to shore with the help of the other fisherman.

It all happened in about five minutes, Miller said.

“He said he was losing feeling in his hands and his hands were hurting,” he said. “At this point, I was more worried about the threat from exposure than from drowning.”

Paramedics arrived and examined the angler, who was later released from the scene.

Miller covers Clarke and Decatur counties for the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. He said he has seen anglers break through the ice before but has never pulled one out.

“I told them next time they want to go ice fishing this time of year, to go north,” Miller said. “It’s 48 degrees here with a south wind. Our ice conditions have been deteriorating quickly for some time.”

Ice fishing is not recommended anywhere in the southern one-third of Iowa. The DNR advises fishermen to use extreme caution during the latter part of the winter as the longer days, thaw-freeze cycles and warmer winds begin to weaken the ice.

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