Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Skating in Spring Village

Skating is all around me. the Daily Hampshire Gazette just did photos of the skating rink in Florence, MA. Olympic Skating is on T.V., and in the Olympic news.

In Spring Village, where I grew up, Mr. O'Donnell would have the fire department flood a section of the Mill field, so it could freeze and become a handy skating rink. He was a very nice man, and had an employee with many children (French Catholic?) that lived in the village.
This provided them, and the rest of the village with healthy outdoor activity.

The local boys would keep it clear of snow. This was probably due to their own interest in playing Hockey. They played a lot of Hockey. It was sometimes dangerous to be skating.

One year, Mr. O'Donnell had the Fire Department flood two separate spots for skating rinks. This made skating much safer.

The rinks were near to street lights, often we enjoyed skating in the evening. All ages, all socio-economic levels (though the spread was not that great in this little ethnic mill village) took part.

My older brother went on to sideline as a Hockey Coach or Teacher. I have a photo of his youngest boy skating at four years old in Hockey gear.

Beyond this field near the road, tucked away in the small section of woods off Mill Circle, was a pond. This is where my sister and I would often go. It was quiet and private. We enjoyed the wildlife while we skated about, and the walk home was shorter than from our lot at the Square Piece. It was often twilight when I would remove my skates to prepare to leave. Twilight reflected on darkening ice, evergreens and sparkling snow enclosing it, as though it were a mirror in a green and white frame. I yearn for this place, and it's colors, it's privacy, the stillness, the refuge.

3 comments:

  1. What a lovely memory. I, too, enjoyed skating in the woods, down the hill beyond my grandparent's house. We'd skate till our feet froze, then hobble up the hill and have Grandma heat us up with some hot chocolate! I wish I could still skate!

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  2. Yes, the hot chocolate! And maybe a fresh slice of pie to go with it! I don't skate anymore, either. I sure remember frozen feet, and the skates didn't really fit, either.

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  3. Loved this post. Your words about ice skating with your sister brought back sweet memories of mine! There was a small pond that very few knew about that we skated at.
    My Dad also used to flood the cement behind our garage to create a tiny skate rink, which is where we first started skating! :)

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