Anything valuable had been removed years earlier. But there was still a lot of interesting junk up there: old records, aluminum garbage cans, some of my Dad's old college books, an old bait box, a bucket, some milk crates, some 'Fool's Gold' (a souvenir of our 1965 South Dakota trip) a First Federal Savings of Lorain frisbee, and a few baseball bats.
And a backyard ice skating rink.
The box was very old and falling apart, and the lid (above) split into a few pieces when I opened it. It contained a huge piece of plastic and a roll of corrugated aluminum – all unused.
How old was that thing?
I looked for an old newspaper ad that might have given my parents the idea of having a backyard rink. There was only one year – 1957 – when a few ads ran.
Here's one that ran in the Lorain Journal on December 19, 1957.
A backyard ice rink for my sister (an only child at the time) probably seemed like a fun thing to do. So what happened to throw cold water on the whole idea?
2 comments:
We had a fairly large backyard where we played football and wiffle ball and if it rained hard before a freeze we’d have our own skating pond. I remember getting double runner skates for Christmas to learn. Later on Skating at lakeview park while in high school was a great way to meet girls. Since moving to Nashville we have a few rinks around town due to the predators NHL team. I’ve gone a few times but not lately. My sore back and hard ice don’t go well together.Todd
I grew up near a lake, a small section of which was cleared for ice skating, and I could go anytime. Went about 5 times. Cold, miserable, and my ankles were never strong enough to hold me upright. Much preferred roller skating. I gave roller blading a try later in life and it was a blast, but old bones and common sense eventually coaxed me out of that nonsense!
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