Quote:
Originally Posted by pappyline
Yeh, that system worked well. I remember being fascinated by it. Of course my town had a natural ice rink & all they did was scrape the snow off between periods.
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The more I think about it, the more I remember that it was said that the manual system of resurfacing the ice at Maple Leafs Garden did a better job than the Zamboni, at least the Zambonie of the time, but the Zamboni replaced it because it was quicker and could be operated by a single person.
My village, too, had a natural ice rink. And between periods we just scraped off the snow stirred up by the players. About the time of the sixth or seventh game of the day, that ice surface was a bit of a mess. You could still play hockey on it, but your pass might slow down a bit and your skating wasn't as quick.
I lived on Lake Simcoe, north of Toronto near Keswick, for a few years in the mid-1950s, and we skated and played hockey on the ice-covered lake. It was like a beautiful dream, playing hockey from dawn and all day into the night with truck headlights providing illumination when it became dark. Oh, and one of the greatest of pleasures was hanging onto a rope on our skates behind a pickup truck as it went 50 or 60 miles per hour across the ice. Sadly, more often than not, the lake was covered by snow, too deep to bother clearing it--at least too much for us with our limited means.