IcecapadesMonday, January 10, 2011 For anyone who has skated, that sound recalls the movement of flexing, leaning, digging first one blade edge into the ice to push and glide, then the other. The scuff of blades on rink ice or a frozen pond brings to mind the gift of almost unnatural speed, the flick of a puck, the clash of competition. It recalls turns, spins and curlicues etched on ice. It revisits places reachable only in the coldest months of the year. Ice skating is so basic to winter it’s prehistoric. The first skates were leg bones of deer or ox, bored with holes for leather straps. These bone skates allowed hunters and travelers to conserve energy by gliding rather than walking across frozen lakes. Technology has improved a lot since 3,000 B.C. Top-of-the-line men’s hockey skates, with carbon fiber composite boot, molded anatomical fit, lace-bite protection and Lightspeed stainless-steel runners retail for around $600. Of course, there are plenty of great skates that cost a lot less. Good-quality figure and hockey skates start around $80. Skater’s Edge is an old-fashioned New England pro shop on Manchester’s West Side, “serving the hockey gods for over 20 years” as their Web site proclaims. Armand and Mike Desrosiers repair old skates and fit and sell new and used hockey and figure skates. The father and son team are masters of the art of skate sharpening, which can make all the difference in performance on the ice. The blade of a skate is not like the blade of a knife. Hockey and figure skates actually have two edges on each blade. For hockey skates especially, the arc of the hollow between the edges determines the attributes of the skate. How often should skates be sharpened? Depends on how hard you use them. “When they begin to slip and lose their grip” is Mike Desrosiers’ advice. He sharpens his kids’ skates weekly. Once a year may be adequate for the occasional skater. Mike grew up in Bedford, playing hockey on ponds, in back yards, at the local rink, then in high school and college. His dad Armand got involved in youth hockey administration, then national development of the sport. Mike’s oldest daughter is a figure skater, and his son and younger daughter play hockey. The schedule can be intense, but Mike doesn’t mind. “It’s a long winter. It’s what you do to keep busy,” he says. Ice hockey is a relative of the Scottish game of shinty and the Irish sport of hurling. Historians believe the English summer game of field hockey, taking its name from the French word hoquet, meaning shepherd’s crook or bent stick, became the winter game of bandy in the frozen fens of eastern England. British soldiers brought the sport to Canada. Students at McGill University, in Montreal, played the first games with modern rules in the 1870s. New Hampshire got in on the action early. The first organized game of ice hockey in the United States was played on November 17, 1883, on the lower pond at St. Paul’s School in Concord. In 1910 mill teams and a Mill League were formed in Berlin. The Concord Hockey Club was founded in 1927. In Manchester the St. Jean (de Baptiste) Maple Leafs played at the Kelly Street church grounds from the late 1930s to the early 1960s. Mike Desrosiers, whose grandparents are French-Canadian, says that in the first 10 years of business, many of his customers had French accents. That has changed. The sport is changing, too, with more indoor rink play, more travel teams and increased specialization. Indoor rinks have vastly expanded options and seasons for skaters. A typical commercial rink in New Hampshire offers open time for public skating, skate rentals and instruction and rents ice to hockey leagues, high school teams and figure skating clubs. Mark Farrington, director of skating at The Rinks at Exeter, says kids as young as 3 can learn to skate, but it’s fun for all ages and a good workout besides. First step: learning to stand and walk in skates off the ice, and being able to stand on one leg and lift the other. “It’s all about balance,” he says. Beginners rehearse falling down and getting up. Kneepads and elbow pads are recommended and helmets are required. Concussions are probably the most common skating injury, says Farrington. As a professional figure skater, he has had four of them. On the ice, rookie skaters first learn to walk, then “swizzle” — bending and extending their knees to curve their skates together and apart, using the blade edges to push off and gain momentum. “Stop” is a snowplow; later a one-foot hockey stop is taught. Beginners normally wear figure skates because the blade is flatter. Hockey blades have a rocker bottom, and the deeper hollow between the two edges makes a skater work harder but it grips the ice better, says Kurt Mallet, director of hockey at The Rinks at Exeter. Two of the largest youth hockey leagues in New Hampshire play out of The Rinks, competing at an elite national level. Instruction, camps and clinics are offered at all levels. The sport is booming for girls right now, beginning at the U-8 level. A beginner clinic for “hockey moms” meets Thursday mornings, for women who got roped into the game thanks to their kids and ended up wanting to play, too. The Winter Olympics usually boost participation in winter sports, says Karen Linehan, owner of The Rinks. The opening ceremony for the 2010 Winter Olympics will be February 12 in Vancouver. But ice skating is not all about games and glory. Adventurers in search of remote beauty in the great outdoors are discovering a new old-fashioned kind of skating, blazing trails across lakes and gliding for miles on frozen rivers. Instead of strapping bones on their shoes, they clip long, flat blades onto cross-country ski boots. Nordic skating (sometimes called tour skating, or distance skating) is popular in Scandinavia and Northern Europe, where people commute to work on frozen canals or skate recreationally outdoors. Jamie Hess, of Norwich, Vt., took a trip to Stockholm in 1999, and fell in love with Nordic skating. He started a business and began importing the specialty skates and other Nordic equipment to sell here. He also founded the Montshire Skating Club. The club maintains a four-and-a-half-mile-long groomed ice skating trail on Lake Morey, in Fairlee, Vt., across the river from Orford. It is the longest such trail in the U.S. The club also leads free “wild skating” tours on many lakes in central New Hampshire and Vermont, and sometimes portions of the Connecticut River. Wild skaters meet at the edge of the lake or river, choose a route and test the ice as they go along. Nordic skate rentals are $20 per day and are advisable on a tour. “Figure or hockey skates would not keep up,” says Hess. “Nordic skates are so much more efficient over distance. They’re safer, too. Outdoors the ice can be bumpy, with cracks and patches of snow.” Nordic skating is highly weather-dependent: an e-mail newsletter features updated ice reports and notices of upcoming tours, workshops and events. There are currently 2,000 subscribers. To sign up for the newsletter, visit www.nordicskater.com. For information about Nordic skating, visit www.nordicskater.org. NH Great Places to SkateDartmouth/Lake Sunapee
Occom Pond, Hanover Campion Ice Skating Rink Lakes
Squam Lakes Winterfest King Pine Ski Area Laconia Ice Arena Pop Whalen Ice Center Rochester Ice Arena Merrimack Valley
Bow Town Pond Conway Arena Ice Skating Parks, Nashua Cyclones Arena Everett Arena White Park, Concord Parks and Recreation Ice Den Arena Tri-town Ice Arena Icenter Manchester Parks and Recreation maintains two arenas and a pond: JFK Memorial Coliseum West Side Ice Arena Monadnock
Cheshire Fair Ice Arena Robin Hood Park The Inn at East Hill Farm Woodbound Inn Seacoast
Dover Ice Arena Jacksons Landing Ice Rink The Rinks at Exeter White Mountains
Bethlehem Recreation Park Ham Arena Loon Mountain Waterville Valley Ice Arena Great North Woods
Notre Dame Arena The Balsams Grand Resort Hotel How To: One-foot SpinFigure skaters must have balance, coordination and core strength, says Mark Farrington, director of skating at The Rinks at Exeter. Demonstrate your skill with this intermediate-level move. Safety On Frozen Ponds and LakesIce should be 4 to 6 inches thick to bear the weight of a small group, according to the N.H. Fish and Game Department. Test thickness in several locations using an auger or axe. If ice at the shoreline is wet and cracked, stay on dry land. Rivers and lakes are prone to wind and wave action, so choose smaller bodies of water. If you break through the ice, don’t panic. Lay both arms on the unbroken ice and kick hard. This will help lift your body onto the ice. Roll to safety. To help someone who has fallen in, lie down flat and reach with a branch, plank or rope; form a human chain, if possible. After securing the victim, wiggle backwards to solid ice before standing. The victim may need CPR or treatment for hypothermia. People who participate in “wild skating” over lakes and rivers, often while wearing special Nordic skates, will bring safety equipment with them that may include: How To: Build Your Own Backyard Skating RinkHockey legend Wayne Gretzky learned to skate in his own back yard, on a rink built by his dad, Walter. The “Wally Coliseum,” as the rink was nicknamed, kept the four Gretzky boys busy all winter in Brantford, Ontario, in the 1960s. How To: Play Pond HockeyThe sunsets are amazing and the beer stays cold. Nothing beats a pick-up game of pond hockey at the end of a winter day or just passing a puck back and forth on the ice with a friend. “It’s a big stress reliever,” says Kevin Keaveney. “It takes your mind off everything.” The 42-year-old is energetic in his pursuit of relaxation. Keaveney scouts conditions at local ponds near his home in Exeter. He keeps his skills sharp playing indoors a couple evenings a week. He and his friends skated on a water hazard at a country club golf course until they were discovered and asked to leave. He has been known to knock on doors when he spots a decent man-made rink in someone’s yard. His policy: “Never be afraid to grab a big shovel and help a group cleaning off a pond. Usually they’re more than happy to share, and you meet new friends.” When he closes his eyes, he can picture the perfect black ice, several inches thick. It comes after a hard freeze and lasts only until snow falls and winter weathers the ice. “It’s like skating on glass,” he reminisces. Take a guy like Keaveney who grew up skating on ponds and never lost his love for it. Multiply him by a whole lot of other guys who did the same thing, or wish they did. Bring them together on 20 rinks on a very big lake in New Brunswick, Canada, for three days of intense competition and camaraderie. Call it the World Pond Hockey Championships. This February, 120 teams from around the world with names like the Goaldiggers, Cold Fusion, Boston Long Shots, Maritime Mafia, Puckweisers and the Raggedy Ass River Boys will vie for the title. Keaveney and his team, the Hard Chargers, will be there, too. It will be the sixth time they have competed — winning some games but not all, and loving almost every minute of it. “The first year, the wind chill was minus 35,” he says. Games are 4-on-4. Rinks are half again as long as the standard NHL rink and rimmed with snow so there are no banking shots. Body checking and slapshots are illegal. Penalties are few. Helmets are the only mandatory protection, though Keaveney wears knee and elbow pads, too. Goals are standard width but just 10 inches high, with no goalies. There are no offsides. Passes are kept below the knee. When a puck goes out of bounds, the last team to touch it loses possession. Skating and stick skills, and smart teamwork, take precedence over brute force. “It’s a real chess match. With 30 minutes running time, you don’t want to expend all your energy right away,” says Keaveney. Traditional at the end of a game: a (seriously cold) beer. This year, a team called CMI, from Stratham, will also compete at the world champs. At the opening ceremonies two teams will now hold the New Hampshire flag. Also, for the first time since the tournament began in 2002, the World Championships will include a women’s division. Large-scale pond hockey tournaments are growing in popularity as people rediscover back-to-basics hockey played in the great outdoors. New Hampshire gets in on the action this year with the first annual New England Pond Hockey Classic, scheduled for Feb. 5-7 on Lake Winnipesaukee in Meredith. Keaveney has been teaching his daughter and son, who are 9 and 4, to skate — just like his own father taught him years ago. He hopes one or both of his kids will develop a passion for hockey. “Once you develop the skills on ice, skating backwards and forwards, you glide around and it’s very relaxing, like a form of meditation. But you’re not just sitting there: you’re outside, and maybe the sun is going down and the sky is red,” muses Keaveney. “And you get the last bit of a game in before the sun sets.” “I’m obsessed,” he admits. “But in a good way.” The World Pond Hockey Championship US Pond Hockey Championships New England Pond Hockey Classic New England Pond Hockey Festival Reader Comments NOTICE: Effective January, 2012, we have converted our commenting system to Facebook. For more information read our updated Comment Policy |

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