Calgary

Icy conditions force Calgarian into creative mode of transportation

It was icy in Fernie — so icy that Reid Tannahill decided to throw on his skates in order to get to the ski hill.

Reid Tannahill skated down a Fernie highway while carrying his skis

Reid Tannahill decided to strap on his skates after freezing rain forced RCMP to shut down roads in the Fernie, B.C., area. (Brendan Eamonn Morgan/Facebook)

The roads were just a little icy in Fernie, B.C., on Thursday night.

Freezing rain made travel in the area extremely dangerous. It was the same weather system that forced the temporary closure of Highway 3 from Coleman in the Crowsnest Pass, Alta., to the British Columbia border.

Firefighter Brendan Morgan was attending a scene after dozens of vehicles slid off the road around 9:30 p.m. when he noticed something coming his way.

He said someone remarked: "I think that's a guy skating on the highway." So he pulled out his phone to take a video.

That guy was Reid Tannahill. He was travelling to Fernie from Calgary with a group of friends to go skiing. They had pulled over in a Dairy Queen parking lot just as the mayhem started.

Since road travel was turning out to be impossible, the friends were forced to walk the rest of the way to their buddy's condo at the ski hill.

Tannahill​, who plays in an outdoor hockey league, happened to have his skates in the trunk. So he strapped them on and headed off on his 4.5-kilometre skate to his destination.

"Nobody could walk, and I was carrying my skis and everything — it was just really awkward," he said.

'Easier than walking'

"So it was actually a lot easier than walking," Tannahill​ added, saying it was also safer.

Tannahill​ said vehicles that were just trying to cross the road to a gas station ended up in the ditch.

But not all of his friends were as prepared.

"I didn't have skates, so I walked — took forever," said Craig Fulowski in a Facebook message.

The freezing rain also put a damper on amazing skiing conditions at the hill. 

"It's pretty upsetting because they had some of the best snow ever this week, and the rain pretty much made its way up the mountain," said Tannahill​.

But he was impressed with the kindness of Fernie residents, who opened their homes to strangers who needed a place to stay.

"Fernie always blows me away with their hospitality," he said.