Journey Indiana
A Frigid Tradition: This Family Has Been Building a Giant Ice Tower in Their Backyard for More Than 60 Years!
Clip: Season 7 Episode 9 | 6m 32sVideo has Closed Captions
Every family has its own traditions, but few are as fantastic as the Veal's Ice Tree.
Every family has its own traditions, but few are as fantastic as the Veal's Ice Tree. Each winter, when the weather gets cold enough, they begin pumping frigid pond water onto layers of brush in their backyard. Slowly a massive crag of ice is formed that can climb as high as 80 feet tall.
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Journey Indiana is a local public television program presented by WTIU PBS
Journey Indiana
A Frigid Tradition: This Family Has Been Building a Giant Ice Tower in Their Backyard for More Than 60 Years!
Clip: Season 7 Episode 9 | 6m 32sVideo has Closed Captions
Every family has its own traditions, but few are as fantastic as the Veal's Ice Tree. Each winter, when the weather gets cold enough, they begin pumping frigid pond water onto layers of brush in their backyard. Slowly a massive crag of ice is formed that can climb as high as 80 feet tall.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship♪ >> Describing the ice tree is so difficult for me.
It just touches your spirit in a way that nothing else does.
♪ >> When people visit and they see the ice tree in person, they say, this is like nothing I even imagined.
It's taller.
It's bigger.
It's more beautiful.
Pictures don't do it justice.
♪ >> So in 1961, there's five kids in the house.
My parents have a home office, and let's get the kids out of the house so we can work in peace.
And there was no snow on the ground to make a snow hill.
So my dad goes, well, let's make an ice hill.
So he started spraying the hill.
When the wind shifted that night, it blew the water on honeysuckle bushes, and it froze and made this beautiful pattern.
And with his personality, let's make it bigger, better, more fun, that was my dad.
So that's how the ice tree started.
>> My dad passed in July of 1973.
And just between all of us kids, we kept it going until the third generation was ready to start ice tree building.
>> I was never able to meet my grandpa, but because of the ice tree and what he created, I feel like I get to be a part of what he was doing.
And I feel like I get to meet him in that sort of way.
♪ We typically start this tree with the water running when 30 degrees hits consistently for more than seven days.
So before that, we'll build a frame, and we'll just sit and wait.
♪ We get the water from our pond, and there's an inground pump in the pond.
We're using what nature has given us.
And it's a spring-fed pond.
So when this ice melts, it just goes straight back to the pond, and in the summertime, we build a water slide.
♪ The hoses don't freeze up, because under pressure, water doesn't freeze.
So if we can keep these going constantly until the end of the ice tree season, it won't freeze.
So these hoses run all night, all day, we never turn them off so that we can just keep this water going.
♪ I have many roles in maintaining the tree.
My main role is being an ice tree builder, which means that I need to be in charge of making sure all of the hoses are placed where they need to be placed, getting branches from trees that need trimmed around the property, and then placing them on the ice where I know that I want to grow the ice, and make the ice tree taller.
♪ We climb it, take our hatchet, hatch away with what we need to hatch so that we can keep a climbing route.
And then we will take the branches, we'll climb up, we'll place those at the top of the ice.
And then if we need to add a hose to what's up there, we'll add a hose to make that hose taller.
I climb the ice tree without getting hurt by, one, putting these spikes on my boots.
And that really helps to grip it, but it's still so slippery.
Sometimes I'll have these on, and I'll slip and fall.
So I'll also take my hatchet with me.
I will hatchet the ice to kind of break it up, make it more of like a powdery snowy effect.
And then that makes more of a grip so that I can climb it.
♪ Normally, we can get it about 30 to 45 feet.
If there's a longer stretch, we'll get it taller.
So this is average for what we are used to for building.
♪ I really like to make sure that there are beautiful icicles in the front of the tree, and we don't make our climbing route in the front of the tree, because when people come, we want to make it really beautiful for their pictures or videos or whatever they are wanting to do here.
♪ We have a fourth generation.
Her name is Athena Hawk, and that is my daughter.
And a week ago, she got to color the ice tree for the first time.
Look how good you are doing!
We add color because it brightens it.
It makes it look beautiful.
It's another way that we can be artistic with the ice.
And with that, we've been finding that everybody that comes to see the ice tree really, really likes this color.
♪ If there's not color on it and people are visiting, they ask us, when are you going to color it?
>> I live nearby, and I never actually see it, and finally we went to go see it.
It's way more impressive than I even imagined it would be.
>> I think it's cool just kind of in someone's backyard.
I didn't realize.
I thought it was going to be in the middle of a park or something.
>> It's insane.
I thought it was gonna be like a small tree, like that big, but it's a lot bigger than that.
>> It's pretty cool.
I've never seen these colors before.
>> Any friend I have, and, like, if they come to this side of town, I'm like you have to come see it!
Like, it's the best.
♪ >> This year's ice tree was so much better than I imagined.
I'm really happy about how tall it is this year and how wide it is and what it looks like.
I wish we had more time to keep building it taller, but I think it went really well, and I'm gonna miss it so much.
>> We keep up the ice tree every year because it's a part of us now.
It's what feeds our spirits.
The years that it's too warm to do it, I feel like it was a waste of winter.
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