EPISODE 199 ICE SKATING ON THE CREDIT RIVER…THEN DISASTER

EPISODE  199   SKATING ON THE CREDIT RIVER…THEN DISASTER

alan skeoch
Dec. 2020

Global warming has made free skating on Lakes and rivers less and less common.   There  was a
time when  our river, the Credit River, was strung with coloured lights and the ice strengthened with
flooding.  Ice so strong that a tractor with snow blade could clear long stretches of the river 
from the Port Credit Bridge north into  the wilderness beyond the railway bridge where the 
Go Train thunders by.

Was it global warming that ended the river skating?  Or was it some insurance executive who
pointed our the City liability?  

Good news.  There are still chances to skate up the Credit River in certain
years when the temperature drops  and the snow does  not drop.  Marjorie,
the Kids and I have grabbed these moments for they are ephemeral.




Now that is real skating.  An adventure.  Unlimited  solid ice that seems to have no end.   


A hockey game with no boundaries.


I am not the best skater.  Not a Gretsky/  More a dreamer…loving the open ice with no need to stop.



My last time on the river ice was not so pleasant.   I was  not as alert as others.  I revved up my speed
and was just flying over the ice.. No speed limit posted.

Then,  WHAM!…I DID A HEAD FIRST DIVE AND LET MY NOSE BE  A RUDDER AND A BRAKE.   What happened? The wind  had blown 
sand on piece of ice.  Enough to stop my skates … Dead stop.  My body flew  parallel to the ice for a bit then
my head  angled down and  my nose got the worst of  it.






There have been a few days when the Fifth Line of Erin Township has become one long
skating rink…as Marjorie and  Kevin enjoyed one winter day before the plows arrived.


Glare ice on the Fifth line is less and  less  likely these days.  Sand and gravel is spread
as soon as  the road  gets  icy.  And the snow plows stir it all up.   Must be so, I Guess.

FOND MEMORY:  Suppose you are  Given the chance to skate on a river or lake.  Make sure the ice is solid of course.  But grab
the chance.   Long long ago Russ Vanstone invited a bunch  of  us  loving couples to his Georgian Bay
cottage when the weather was bitingly cold.  We could  hold hands  and  skate into the blackness of the night.
“From here to Eternity,  Marjorie.”   We  had that moment.  We did not let it slip through our fingers.

alan skeoch
Dec.2020







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