I'm not a snow person either, but I did see something on TV a while back comparing some different solutions. A typical front wheel drive car drives into a snow drift and gets one its tires stuck. The driver spins the tire a bit, trying to drive out, melting the snow and letting it refreeze into a slick icy rut. The tire then just hopelessly spins in the rut as all the engine power goes to that one wheel.
As a demonstration, they tried various methods to get unstuck, like shoveling a path out, floor mats, kitty litter, trying to melt the ice with the cigarette lighter, etc. A hunk of chain link fence is one thing, but for the typical things that people might put under the tire, they were all basically ejected out the back and the tire just spun in place. The lighter is useless and just makes more ice. I forget why digging the path didn't work...I think the tire still couldn't initially get out of the iced up rut it was in and the "lip" of the rut was too hard to break up with the plastic snow shovel. Well, what was the secret to getting out?
Reducing the tire pressure so that you increased the surface area in contact with the icy rut. Then some gentle application of throttle and the car climbed right out of the rut. You can keep driving at a safe speed until you're on firmer ground, and then you can stop to reinflate the tire. You did remember to pack the portable compressor, didn't you? <img src="/images/graemlins/wink.gif" alt="" />
I think this method works partly by increasing the friction on the stuck wheel, so that it can help climb out of the rut. And I think the added friction helps send power to the non-stuck wheel, which also helps pull the car out. Someone who understands automobile differentials can explain that part better than me.