Manitoba

Warming climate, wacky weather create skating trail trials and tribulations

What used to be taken for granted in Canada — winter weather cold enough to allow skating on rivers and ponds — has become a meteorological throw of the dice, thanks to the long-term effects of climate change coupled with the natural variability from year to year.

Canadian cities, towns forced to adapt, or abandon outdoor skating trails and rinks

A barricade blocks access to a river skating trail. A sign reads: Trail closed.
Winnipeg's Nestaweya River Trail was open for only nine days this past winter. There is enough ice to open this year. (Darin Morash/CBC)

In 2023, it wasn't cold enough in Ottawa to skate on the Rideau Canal. In 2024, it was only cold enough in Winnipeg to allow skating on its rivers for nine days.

What used to be taken for granted in Canada — winter weather cold enough to allow skating on rivers and ponds — has become a meteorological throw of the dice, thanks to the long-term effects of climate change coupled with the natural variability of weather from year to year.

David Phillips, a climatologist with Environment and Climate Change Canada, said winters have warmed in Canada by an average of 4 C over the past 77 years.

Over the past decade alone, he said, Canada has lost an average of two to three weeks of sub-zero temperatures.

"The result of that is that you can't grow ice," Phillips said in an interview on Monday from his home in Barrie, Ont. 

"That's why people are seeing things they haven't seen when they were youths, when it would be automatic by a certain date that you'd go skating on the Rideau Canal or on the Red River."

The organizations that manage the skating trails in Ottawa and Winnipeg have been forced to adapt to the warmer and in some cases, more unpredictable weather.

In the Manitoba capital, it has been cold enough so far this season to begin preparing the Nestaweya River Trail along the Assiniboine River near The Forks. There is 36 centimetres of ice on the river, which is more than enough to support the weight of ice-making machines and people, said Dave Pancoe, a manager responsible for the skating trail at The Forks.

That said, a late-season period of high water has left the port at The Forks encrusted in so much silt, the approach to the river is as spongy as dough and unsafe to use, Pancoe said. To mitigate this curveball, workers have built scaffolding to allow people on foot and on skates to access the river trail as soon as on New Year's Day.

"We just have to be more nimble," Pancoe said Monday in an interview at The Forks. "The days that we can get out on the ice, we have to be able to react to that quickly, and then when we have to get off quick, we have to be able to do that, also."

WATCH | Skating on Canadian lakes and rivers more of an ideal than a reality with our changing winters:

Skating on Canadian lakes and rivers more of an ideal than a reality with our changing winters

4 days ago
Duration 2:32
Skating on a frozen pond. There may be nothing more Canadian. But skating outdoors on a body of water is no longer a given on the Prairies and in central Canada.

In 2020, high water on the Assiniboine prevented the river trail from opening at all. The previous year, it was open for 79 days.

Uncertainty for Rideau

A sign with the word "closed" outdoors in winter.
The Rideau Canal Skateway, seen here January 2021, was closed entirely in 2023 and reopened this past winter. (Jean Delisle/CBC)

Highly variable conditions have also made it difficult for the National Capital Commission to prepare the skating trail on the Rideau Canal in Ottawa.

After the full-season closure in 2023, the trail returned this year with the help of the use of lighter equipment that allowed workers on to the trail earlier, NCC spokesperson Benoit Desjardins said in a statement.

Other jurisdictions are closing some public skating areas. In Caledon, Ont., volunteer ice maker Ken Hunt was told earlier this month he would no longer be permitted to maintain skating trails on Palgrave Pond, a small body of water he's been maintaining for 24 years.

"They were saying the ice was unsafe," Hunt said Monday in an interview from Fleet, U.K. "So I had put a sign on the on the benches saying 'Sorry kids, I had to close down.'"

An ice-covered pond with skaters and a hockey goal net, surrounded by dry marsh plants.
Palgrave Pond in Caledon, Ont. has been closed to skating this year. (Submitted by Nicole Wilkins)

As the Globe and Mail first reported, Hunt was told a pond-access agreement between the Town of Caledon and the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority expired.

"I was broken-hearted," he said. "Growing up on the Gaspé Peninsula, we always had rinks but we never had arenas. We just went out and made whatever rinks we could on a small bay, on the lakes, on the rivers."

In Winnipeg, Pancoe at The Forks said he cannot imagine a Canada without outdoor rinks.

"So much of our identity is tied to the winter and it being cold," he said. "It's just so ingrained in our psyche here."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Bartley Kives

Senior reporter, CBC Manitoba

Bartley Kives joined CBC Manitoba in 2016. Prior to that, he spent three years at the Winnipeg Sun and 18 at the Winnipeg Free Press, writing about politics, music, food and outdoor recreation. He's the author of the Canadian bestseller A Daytripper's Guide to Manitoba: Exploring Canada's Undiscovered Province and co-author of both Stuck in the Middle: Dissenting Views of Winnipeg and Stuck In The Middle 2: Defining Views of Manitoba.