If you were lucky enough to be walking along Lake Mendota shoreline at Shorewood Hills and Frautschi Point on March 16, 2026, you might have seen ice balls, or ice eggs, floating in the water. This was a rare occurrence of naturally formed balls of ice that form in cold water.

While they look a little like hail, the formation of ice balls is very different. The freezing temperatures form sheets of ice on the water surface. The wind and the resulting wave action causes the ice sheets to break up and form small pieces of ice and slush. The gentle tossing of the water by a breeze causes the pieces of ice to collide and stick together. Single balls of ice begin to form in the ebb and flow of water and grow as layers of water freeze over the surface of the ice balls. Eventually the wind and water currents move the ice balls to the shoreline where they collect.
The weather conditions must be just right for ice balls to form along a shoreline that is shallow with gentle slope. The temperatures must be slightly below freezing (32°F). The water must be calm with a light swell, and the wind must blow in a steady direction.
Ice balls have been observed in the Great Lakes and along several Arctic shorelines, including those of Estonia, Russia, and Northern Germany. Their sizes have been observed to range from golf ball size to 3 feet in diameter. In 2016, ice balls washed up on a beach in Siberia with some measuring about 3 feet in diameter and covering an 11-mile stretch of coast.
The ice eggs along Lake Mendota were estimated to be the size of a grapefruit.
Steve Ackerman and Jonathan Martin, professors in the UW-Madison department of atmospheric and oceanic sciences, are guests on WHA radio (970 AM) at noon the last Monday of each month. Send them your questions at stevea@ssec.wisc.edu or jemarti1@wisc. edu.



