Ozzie
Member
Who lives close to downtown?From the time I was born all through my teen years, you could make a sheet of ice in your backyard that would usually last until some time in March or so (in Toronto). If you didn't do that, the parks had natural rinks maintained by the city - all free. When my daughters came along in the 90s, I tried once to make a rink for them in the back yard - it barely lasted - too warm. To take them skating, we had to take them to an arena/artificial ice. I'll bet climate change is having an impact because the ice is not convenient and free.
In my teens, we were hockey bums playing 6-7 hours per day. Pucks lasted nearly forever. Ice was free. Skates didn't change that often at that age. Big expense for me was breaking wooden sticks working on my slapshot but those dollars would be laughable today. Back then, give me skates, a puck, a stick and some ice (even if I had to shovel it off) and I was good for hours.
You can't do that in Toronto's climate today. I suspect that is part of it.
There is a free outdoor rink by my place right around bloor/Danforth we can play shinny. I'm committing to play at least once per week over the next 60 days.
I also built a small artificial pad in my backyard that can be played with skates or shoes. Because a real ice rink is impossible now.
If interested in playing on the real rink, just DM me and I'll let you know the shinny times at the free outdoor rink. It's pretty chill and sometimes a former very famous Leaf shows up too. It will close by Mar 1.