The patent for frozen ice on a stick was issued August 19, 1924.
Normally the shaft could extend itself through hard, frozen ice at a hundred feet an hour.
According to the Japanese, each stick would blast a hole five feet straight down into the frozen ice and tundra.
It was like hot, liquid sunlight on a day of frozen ice.
The hills across the frozen ice were only visible as an outline, a different color gray against a backdrop of nothingness.
The swan then pulled himself onto the ice flow and went out to the middle of the frozen ice.
(*) The record was set on naturally frozen ice.
It was set in a high altitude venue (more than 1000 metres above sea level) and on naturally frozen ice.
Explore the wild life and nature of Alaska during the winter gliding over the frozen ice!
The stunt was unsuccessful, as the Cup landed on the frozen ice and had to be retrieved the next day.