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Village Squire, 1977-01, Page 31SPORTS Now that we've got the expensive things, how about the cheap ones? BY KEITH ROULSTON There's a nice new shiny arena just about ready to open in our town. It's a source of community pride, a rdal dandy. It has the usual ice surface and a large public meeting hall %nd oodles of space for dressingrooms and snackbars and for parents to stand in the warmth and watch the kids play in the cold. It cost upwards of a half -million dollars. It's beaufiful to be sure and a real addition to the community but I have to shake my head a little when I look at it and look at the total bill and remember. I guess Imust be getting old, when I start talking like that. I remember the hours we used to spend on the old pond on our farm, the whole neighbourhood clan of youngsters. On good days when we could get out of chores, we'd start in the early morning and go all day, with breaks only to thaw frozen fingers or toes, to get some food or to keep our dogs from fighting. We were disorganized. We were learning bad hockey habits. We made our own rules and broke them as we chose. But man did we have fun. The thing I remember most now was that it was such cheap fun. We had a hockey stick and our skates and maybe the odd piece of equipment that we'd been given for' Christmas, but for the most part, we have very little invested except our time and our limitless imagination. As time went by, of course, the pond just wasn't good enough. Our pride told us that we were beyond that "kid's stuff' and that the only place that was good enough for us now was the big indoor rink in town. That was where the glory was. That was where the hockey heroes played, men (they were really only boys but they seemed like men to adoring youngsters) who were surely nearly just as good as Jean Beliveau and Rocket Richard because who could be better than these magnificent players (that was the day before television in every home showed just how good the really good were) . Even the indoor rinks were relatively simple things in those days. In most smaller towns it was just a steel cover over an ice_ surface with a tew rooms for changing and a snack bar. There was no fancy community hall, not even an artificial ice plant. Of course by the time we were 16 nearly all the old gang from the pond weren't even playing hockey anymore. The big rink in town was just for the elete of hockey. The same of course is true for the big new arenas although there does seem to be some attempt being made to keep older players in the game nowadays. But still, the number of people using an arena in a year is a minority of the population of any given community. Even such events as public skating are almost completely the reilm of the younger set. Yet we spend so much money on it. Likewise the "in" thing for communities of any size to have these days is a swimming pool. Once again the expense is immense and the use minimal. The swimming pool is even more extravagant than the arena in many ways because the swimming pool, if it is outdoors, can only be used about two months of the year, the operating cost is high because of the need for constant supervision for safety's sake, and the clientelle is even more restricted to youngsters. Yet despite the cost most communities have at least one and probably both of the facilities mentioned. A lot, though, don't have things like tennis courts, outdoor basketball courts, open-air skating rinks or horseshoe pits. All the latter are relatively inexpensive. In recreation and sport, as in just about any other aspect of North American life, we seem to feel that if it isn't expensive, it isn't any good. We have all the big costly frills, but none of the simple, cheap ones. We have all the sports and activities that require supervision, but none that allow kids, or adults for that matter to play at their own pace in their own way without doing damage to anyone else. In winter, I'd particularly like to see us get together in our communities and build outdoor rinks for pleasure skating. I haven't skated for years, I must admit, and gave up_ skating back in high schook because it seemed to be kid's stuff. I rediscoved the joys of the sport however in college when we used to go down to the big outdoor rink at Toronto's city hall and skate for hours, even in the coldest of days. An outdoor rink, with the sun shining down by day or the stars out by night is a far more pleasurable place to skate than an arena. I'd be willing to bet that if some community organizations took the time to build an outdoor rink a lot more adults would be digging out the blades from the upstairs. closet then. That would truly be recreation, and inexpensive too. It would be a return to the past, the years nearly a century ago when the local ice rink was a major center of socializing in the winter, not just for the hockey crowd or the curling crowd or the figure skating children and mothers as today, but for the whole community. Somehow I think we could learn from the people of those days. S a n d JEEP TOYOTA American Motors STRICKLAND AUTOMOBILES Goderich (519) 524-8841 524-8411 524-9381 { • t4 M. Nott • 11.4 CROWN HARDWARE 1.4 'L HELEN AND MERVIN Wish to extend the Season's Greetings Seaforth, Ont. 527-1420 • May your New Year be 14, rich in all the good things ... Hearty health, Meaningful work • Warm friendships, and a • Happy Home! �• Peace to You and Yours! „Y. Village Squire/January 1977 21