Manitoba

Skate on: Full 7.5-km Red River skating trail is officially open for the season

People have already been skating on it for weeks but on Tuesday, the Red River Mutual skating trail at The Forks was officially unveiled for the season.

Skaters have been on trail, which had official opening ceremony Tuesday, since Dec. 22

Two people ice skating.
Two people skate on the Red River Mutual Trail at The Forks on Tuesday. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

People have already been using it for weeks but on Tuesday, Winnipeg's Red River Mutual skating trail at The Forks officially welcomed skaters for the season.

The trail has been growing and open to skaters since Dec. 22, but its official opening was marked Tuesday when Mayor Brian Bowman, on one of the ice resurfacers used to groom the track, drove through a thick red ribbon.

"When you're skating on the river, you hear so many languages spoken, you meet people from all over the world that are here visiting and a lot of Winnipeggers just rediscovering the beauty of Winnipeg," Bowman said. "And of course, our rivers are one of our greatest natural assets."

The trail stretches 7.5 kilometres from The Forks to Churchill Drive on the Red River, and all the way to Arlington Street on the Assiniboine River.

"The exciting thing about this year and today is we're really back on the Assiniboine. We haven't been able to get this far on the Assiniboine since 2009," said Chelsea Thomson, manager of marketing and communications for The Forks.

Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman rides an ice resurfacer on the Red River Mutual Trail on Tuesday. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

In that year, the trail was just over 9.3 kilometres long and went all the way to Assiniboine Park, Thomson said. The trail set the Guinness World Record for longest naturally frozen skating trail the year before, at 8.54 kilometres.

Thomson said in recent years the trail has averaged around six kilometres in length, and has been as short as three kilometres.

"The best part about going seven kilometres means we're stretching to new [communities] or communities we haven't reached in several years," she said. "The great part is you can access it from your neighbourhood … come down from your access point."

The trail has already reached last year's total number of days open at 33, Thomson said, and is set to welcome the annual warming hut competition on Friday.

It could still grow, but Thomson said that depends on the weather.

"We'll just have to wait and see. This could be as long as we go this year or maybe we'll go a little bit farther," she said. "Only time will tell."