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No place like a home-made ice rink
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette ^
| Sunday, February 01, 2004
| Cindi Lash
Posted on 02/01/2004 2:09:54 PM PST by Willie Green
Edited on 04/13/2004 2:35:31 AM PDT by Jim Robinson.
[history]
Like just about everyone else in Western Pennsylvania, Thomas and Nancy Songer and their two sons avidly tuned in to the daily weather forecasts over the past couple of weeks.
Unlike just about everyone else in Western Pennsylvania, the Songers exulted each time they heard that they were in for yet another day of snow, sleet and shivers.
(Excerpt) Read more at post-gazette.com ...
TOPICS: Culture/Society; US: Pennsylvania
KEYWORDS: hockey; ice; skating
Nice idea, if you have room in the back yard and the weather is cooperative.
Growing up, we were fortunate to have a small pond within reasonable walking distance,
and 3 much larger ponds if somebody's parent was willing to drive.
But the memorable "challenge" was skating through the woods on some of the frozen creeks. There wasn't much room to really pick-up speed and skate any distance. The creeks were small and shallow, and you had to constantly dodge the logs and rocks that were sticking up through the ice. But the novelty of skating through the woods made it interesting and memorable.
To: martin_fierro
ping
2
posted on
02/01/2004 2:10:31 PM PST
by
Willie Green
( And always look on the bright side of life... Always look on the right side of life...)
To: Willie Green
But home-built rinks are hugely popular in Canada and in the Northern United States, where the rituals of their construction and the roles they played in the childhoods of hockey and skating stars is the stuff of lore. Wayne Gretzky practiced in his back yard..............
His dad just ran a garden hose into the backyard and then kept it groomed.
3
posted on
02/01/2004 2:15:47 PM PST
by
dennisw
To: Willie Green
Sounds like it could make northern winters tolerable. I love ice skating, but we've always lived at the coast or in the south ... not cooperative weather.
4
posted on
02/01/2004 2:20:17 PM PST
by
Tax-chick
(Baby boy born 1/19/04, 8 lbs., 15 oz. (I am not liable for incoherent posts.)
To: Tax-chick
Living in the North, home made rinks are nothing new. They're everywhere here in MN. There are many things to do in the winter in the North...despite what people think. :)
5
posted on
02/01/2004 2:21:53 PM PST
by
Solson
(Our work is the presentation of our capabilities. - Von Goethe)
To: Willie Green
The only thing I liked about ice skating was playing hockey, what a blast. These days it would be straight to the ground.
To: Solson
My husband interviewed for a job in Minneapolis, before he got the offer here in Charlotte. I'm glad they didn't want him up there! Maybe some decade when all the kids are older ... I like drinking wine in front of a fire, with the snow falling outside the picture window (double-pane insulated ...)
7
posted on
02/01/2004 2:32:44 PM PST
by
Tax-chick
(Baby #7, boy #4, born 1/19/04, 8 lbs., 15 oz. (I am not liable for incoherent posts.)
To: Willie Green
Thanks for the memories.....I thought I was the only one who like to "creek skate".
8
posted on
02/01/2004 2:46:21 PM PST
by
BoozeHag
To: BoozeHag
We've got a back yard rink bigger than that, and it formed all by itself after our first two big snowstorms, which were followed by near-total thaws, and then a cold snap. We've got a marshy section of the yard. The ice has turned out perfect. (North Andover, MA)
To: MoralSense
We did our fair share of pond skating in northern ohio...traded the skates in every year for another pair. I used to hate it when the only skates that fit me were black (boy) skates! I still have a pair hanging in the shed, although I live in the mid-atlantic area now. I do have a nice coating of ice on the pool....
10
posted on
02/01/2004 3:35:22 PM PST
by
BoozeHag
To: Willie Green
This is the third year for my son's system here in east central Illinois (Champaign area). He found the 24' wide plastic at Menards. About a month is about all they can hope for here with global warming and all that. Doesn't look like our ground hog will see his shadow tomorrow and I heard a cardnal sing this morning (15 degrees).
To: Willie Green
My dad used to attach the garden hose to the clothesline over the backyard and flood our vegetable garden. The first skate was usually late November.
I still can't skate worth beans 32 years after we moved across town from that house, but I still have wonderful memories.
Now I live on the WET coast. Sometimes, I even miss snow. Not very often, though
12
posted on
02/01/2004 4:15:47 PM PST
by
Don W
(Modesty has ruined more kidneys than liquor.)
To: Tax-chick
It's a great city...but you've got to be a little "weatherproof."
13
posted on
02/01/2004 4:48:47 PM PST
by
Solson
(Our work is the presentation of our capabilities. - Von Goethe)
To: MoralSense
Every year my father would flood our back porch and we had our own ice rink. The only problem was watching out for the sliding glass doors into the family room.
This thread has made me remember how fortunate I was growing up. We always lived on a lake or had a pond in the back for skating.
14
posted on
02/01/2004 4:52:21 PM PST
by
Hillary's Lovely Legs
(Saddam feels so bad for Howard Dean that he has offered him his hole.)
To: BoozeHag
I thought I was the only one who like to "creek skate".Well many creeks seldom have good conditions for skating.
The ice can be too thin due to water flowing underneath...
or often there's simply too much snow blanketing the surface...
but every now and then, Nature cooperates and it's fun to go "exploring" outside the boundaries of the pond!!!
15
posted on
02/01/2004 5:51:08 PM PST
by
Willie Green
( And always look on the bright side of life... Always look on the right side of life...)
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