Manitoba

With gym, pools and other activities closed, backyard ice rinks are booming

What do you do in the middle of a pandemic, when winter weather has arrived and almost every form of recreation is banned? Build an outdoor rink. And that’s exactly what many Winnipeggers are scrambling to do.

Entrepreneur wins scores of fans, racks up OT creating a frozen wonderland

Stick-handling around the pandemic on a backyard rink

4 years ago
Duration 1:50
With almost every form of recreation banned in Manitoba to prevent the spread of the coronavirus, outdoor ice rinks are exploding in popularity — and business is brisk for those who build them.

What do you do in the middle of a pandemic, when winter weather has arrived and almost every form of recreation is banned? Build an outdoor ice rink.

"You get a lot of stick-handling out here. You can get pretty fast if you go in circles," 14-year-old Jake Myshkowsky said last week, as he and his brother faced off on the backyard rink they built with their dad. "I've put a couple of holes through the fence."

Both boys miss playing hockey on their teams, with up to three practices and two games every week.

For them, their backyard rink has become a lifesaver.

"It's something to do ... 100 per cent. I really want to get back there," 10-year-old Luke said.

Jake Myshkowsky, 14, left, and his brother Luke, 10, can't play on their hockey teams because of the COVID-19 pandemic, so they're practising on an outdoor rink they built with their dad in their Winnipeg backyard. (Trevor Brine/CBC News)

'Sometimes crisis creates opportunities'

The Myshkowsky brothers are part of a trend in Winnipeg that began when Manitoba went into Code Red pandemic restrictions in November.

Gyms, arenas, swimming pools and even outdoor playgrounds were closed — and Manitobans were told to stay home to reduce transmission of COVID-19.

For anyone hoping to set up a home gym, it's hard to find a barbell or exercise bike anywhere in the city.

Ryan Starkell, owner of My O.D.R., can't keep up with the demand for outdoor rinks in Winnipeg. He thought he might build a dozen rinks for friends and family, but his business has exploded. (Karen Pauls/CBC News)

"People are stuck with no gyms, no nothing. They need exercise," said Ryan Starkell, owner of My O.D.R. (which stands for outdoor rink).

"I think it's great for mental health to have people to be able to go outside their backyard and exercise a little bit, get a skate and have some fun and let loose, you know, and maybe stop thinking about everything else that's bad that's going on in the world right now."

Starkell started his business in September as a way of making a little extra cash to buy Christmas presents for his five children.

He thought he might build a dozen rinks for friends and family, but his business has exploded.

Starkell spreads the liner for an outdoor rink. It will take about five hours to build and fill it with water. 'Everyone wants their rink built now,' he says. (Karen Pauls/CBC News)

Starkell has already hired a handful of people to help him build and fill the rinks with water. He's even started offering a DIY package, but he can still barely keep up.

"Everyone wants their rink built now," Starkell said, taking a short break during a rink-building project. 

"It's a lot of demand, and it's more than I expected to take on, that's for sure. But doing my best to manage it, you know, not sleeping too much, really trying to cram as much in as I can."

Raymond Senecal fills a backyard rinks built by My O.D.R. from his water truck, which is much faster than using the garden hose. (Trevor Brine/CBC News)

Winnipeg isn't the only place seeing the outdoor rink craze.

NiceRInk is an American family business that sells full do-it-yourself rink kits and all of the individual pieces — but it's taking orders faster than it can manufacture the product.

"Definitely an extreme demand," owner Jim Stoller said last week from Genoa City, Wis.

"We're easily double up right now and just everyone just running ragged as much as they can. Nights, weekends, just trying to get everything out for everyone as fast as we possibly can.... Sometimes crisis creates opportunities." 

Jim Stoller, right, helps his son, Tyler, build a backyard rink using products from their family-run NiceRink company based in Genoa City, Wis. (Submitted by Jim Stoller)

Stoller grew up playing high-level hockey in the USHL, the top junior ice hockey league. Some of his fondest childhood memories involve the outdoor rink his father built, and he still scrimmages with his son on his backyard rink.

"We love hockey. And when you put a rink in the backyard, there's just nothing like it," Stoller said.

NiceRink ships to Canada, and its products can be found at a major retailer here. The company is negotiating a distribution agreement with a second major Canadian retailer, Stoller said, adding he can't disclose more details just yet.

Warning issued about thin ice

It's not just backyards being made into rinks.

As they have for generations, people are also shovelling snow off rivers and their neighbourhood retention ponds for a place to skate — something the City of Winnipeg is warning against.

"This is Canada. I mean, there's ice, people want to play hockey. We get it.... [But] we don't want to see a loss of life. We don't want to see people go through the ice," Mayor Brian Bowman told a news conference last week.

The ice on the rivers is still thin and fragile, and frozen retention ponds are never safe.

The water piped into them carries road salt, making the ice unstable and potentially dangerous, he said.

People skate on ice rinks built on some retention ponds in south Winnipeg on Dec. 2. City officials said people should stay away from waterways because the ice is still thin and issued a specific warning about retention ponds. (Walther Bernal/CBC News)

Every weekend, there are numerous water rescue calls, forcing police, paramedics and fire personnel to respond. On a recent weekend, there were 17 calls, reporting people walking or skating on thin ice around the city.

"We don't want to divert first responders right now, at a time when we know they're being called ... to help out at personal care homes, for example. We don't want to stretch those resources any more than necessary," Bowman said.

The city has also stepped up patrols of retention ponds by bylaw officers to remind people it's prohibited, as well as hazardous.

"We have to utilize the options that are available under provincial public health orders," the mayor said. "Ice skating isn't one of them right now unless it's in a backyard rink."