Colossal Carousel: Little Falls family makes world's largest spinning ice disc
Written By: BrainerdDispatch | Jan 14th 2019 - 2pm
At the next dinner party, remember this bit of trivia: the record for the world's largest ice carousel belongs to a family from Little Falls. For the Zwilling's, however, the feat is anything but trivial.
At the next dinner party, remember this bit of trivia: the record for the world's largest ice carousel belongs to a family from Little Falls. For the Zwilling's, however, the feat is anything but trivial.
Measuring in at 154.3 meters, or 506.2 feet across, the carousel built by Chuck Zwilling and others on Green Prairie Fish Lake north of Little Falls demolished the previous record of 427 feet, accomplished by residents of Sinclair, Maine, earlier this year.
It was the main draw of a weekend festival brimming with planned wintertime activities-hockey, curling, speedskating, figure skating, Nordic skiing and igloo building, among others-all in the name of feeding hungry children.
"It took 49 minutes to get all the way, one full rotation, the first time we spun around," said Becca Ruegemer, one of the volunteers at the weekend event.
The second annual Sunny Zwilling Memorial Ice Carousel Extravaganza, or I.C.E. Fest, was a two-day event Saturday and Sunday, Jan. 12-13, raising money and awareness for Flyer Pride Pack, the weekend backpack food program for at-risk students in the Little Falls School District.
The concept is simple: children at risk of weekend hunger receive a bag of food that is child-friendly, nutritious, nonperishable, and easy to prepare and eat. The packs include two breakfast items, two lunch items, three entrees, two snacks, and fruit, according to the district's website.
According to the nonprofit Feeding America, an estimated 3,310 people in Morrison County are considered "food insecure." Of those, 68 percent do not meet the threshold to be eligible for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP. Food insecurity refers to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's measure of "lack of access, at times, to enough food for an active, healthy life for all household members and limited or uncertain availability of nutritionally adequate foods," Feeding America states on its website.
At an estimated cost of $5.25 per bag and 38 weeks of school, $200 is needed to cover the cost of one child receiving food through the program. With 60 eligible children, the program requires $12,000 for one school year-and that's the amount of money the Zwilling's set out to raise through donations with their free festival.
Although not recognized by Guinness World Records, ice carousel records are kept by the World Ice Carousel Association. Zwilling previously held the record last winter at 367.4 feet, before those in Maine and a group in Lohja, Finland, built bigger ones.
For more photos, go to Brainerd Photo Gallery.
Ice Carousel Extravaganza
Date: 1/13/2019 Album ID: 2225930
Photos by Kelly Humphrey
Read more IceFest reports from: Brainerd Dispatch