Absolutely perfect timing MH! I was just getting ready to post about an event I had yesterday, when I saw your post, so I'll make my post on your thread. Here's one reason, though this was not a river but a (river fed) reservoir, but what really got my attention was that where this happened, there was no obvious signs of any inflow of water to make one suspect a less solid surface.

I had been leaving tracks for a 1/4 mile or so, no reason, just because I can....and was idly thinking maybe I'd come to a full stop and get rid of some coffee, when I felt a change in the surface and actually heard the ice break. I lifted off and went around, this pic was less then a minute later, I found it real interesting. 8 degrees OAT. This res is quite large, and I never did see anything that made this area suspect, (other then it was a bit close to the shoreline, but that shoreline looked innocent) even looking especially hard, after the event. I was going just a hair below flight speed, but at a good water skiing speed, so I don't feel I almost got wet,

but it did make me wait until another res a few miles away, with ice fisherpersons and sled tracks all around, to come to a full stop.
I can see a river landing proper being even more "dynamic", as in who the heck knows. Snowmobiles are the ski pilots friend I have found, and ice fisher types, but watch out for their frozen chip piles their augers leave. I spent a lot of time in Michigan as a kid on frozen lakes, my family was into ice boats, this occurrence really got my attention, yeah I know the term for it is "overflow", but why there?
