NYC: Skate it there, Skate it anywhere

NYC: Skate it there, Skate it anywhere

Kilt skating is taking off in New York City — even during the pandemic. After all, this year’s kilt skate motto is: “our faces may be masked, but our knees will be bare!” The third annual Tartan Kilt Skate NYC was held once again in the heart of Manhattan, presented by American Scottish Foundation in association with Bryant Park.

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Toronto Organizes Kilt Skate Party -- Home Edition

Toronto Organizes Kilt Skate Party -- Home Edition

The pandemic has made us innovate. When public health protocols made community events problematic, we adapted. Everyone was encouraged to kilt skate in a safe, outdoor, socially distanced manner in what we dubbed the Great Canadian Kilt Skate — Home Edition. Now in the GreateriToronto Area (GTA), they’re taking innovation to the next step: the Great Canadian Kilt Skate Zoom & Facebook Party. Join it from 11 a.m. until noon on Saturday February 27.

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Week 6: All Kinds of Skating Venues

Week 6: All Kinds of Skating Venues

A polar vortex may have descended on much of Canada bringing subarctic temperatures, but the days are getting longer and brighter. And no matter what the thermometer says, Canadians are getting out onto the ice in our kilts and tartans. For the MacPherson family in Ottawa, kilts add a new twist to the national game.

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Week 5: THRAWN

Week 5: THRAWN

A cold front hit much of Canada this past week and it may have discouraged some kilt skaters. But the Scots have a word for obstinate determination to do something that seems totally irrational to everyone else. That word is THRAWN. And “thrawn” may be the word that best describes those determined to celebrate Scottish culture with bare knees and ice. And pink skates no less!

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Week 4: Media Trifecta for Winnipeg

Week 4: Media Trifecta for Winnipeg

On Robbie Burns Day day itself, Cathy was interviewed by CTV Television under the title “How You can help Winnipeg become Canada’s Kilt Skate Capital.” Cathy again emphasizes that you don’t have to be Scottish to participate in the kilt skate. “You only have to have Scottish spirit, which all of us have inside us.” She was also asked whether it’s ok to wear longjohns under the kilt. Some may dispute her answer, but let me point out that Cathy has been skating daily throughout a very cold Winnipeg winter. And that “Scottish spirit”” she talks about includes a healthy dose of pragmatism.

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Week 3: Kilts, Cottages and Burns Celebrations

Week 3: Kilts, Cottages and Burns Celebrations

The third week of the Great Canadian Kilt Skate finds more Canadians celebrating Scottish heritage on the nearby outdoor ice where they can safely skate socially distanced. For the third week in a row (and her 18th skate so far this winter), the ever-enthusiastic Cathy Laver-Wright was flying the flags proudly on Winnipeg’s Centennial River Trail.

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Home Edition Week 2 -- A River to Skate Away On

Home Edition Week 2 -- A River to Skate Away On

These past weeks of continued pandemic, some provincial governments have tightened their public health protocols, urging people to stay indoors and stay isolated. In Ontario, the list of reasons to leave home includes exercise, and local governments add their own restrictions on how and where to do it. If you’re going to skate, they caution, do it locally. Well, you can’t get more local than the stream that runs through your property in South Glengarry — now frozen so that, as Joni Mitchell longed for, you have a river you can skate away on.

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Coming Soon: Home Edition of Great Canadian Kilt Skate

Coming Soon: Home Edition of Great Canadian Kilt Skate

“Kilt skating began in 2015,” says Don Cummer, Director National Kilt Skate for the Scottish Society of Ottawa (SSO), which organizes the pan-Canadian event each winter. Some kilt skates bring together scores – even hundreds – of participants. “This year,” says Cummer, “we’re encouraging kilt skaters to stay safe. Skate on your own. Get out with your family. Follow the rules. Have a good time this winter. Oh, and send pictures to #kiltskate.”

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Scottish Government Partners with SSO for Kilt Skates

Scottish Government Partners with SSO for Kilt Skates

The Scottish Government will once again partner with the Scottish Society of Ottawa (SSO) to support kilt skating in Canada as a unique and colourful way to celebrate Scottish culture with bare knees and ice. An agreement has been reached between the government and the SSO that will see eight Canadian cities host kilt skates this year.

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Canada's 2020 Kilt Skate Capital

Canada's 2020 Kilt Skate Capital

The 2020 kilt skate season seems long ago and a world away. In this year of pandemic, it’s good to remember how, last winter, we were able to gather together in numbers and celebrate Scottish heritage with food, dance, and lacing up the skates. All in all, it was an outstanding season for bare knees and ice.

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2020 Canal Skateway Season Ends

2020 Canal Skateway Season Ends

At just 31 days of skating, the 2020 season of the Rideau Canal Skateway has been among the shortest, but it’s been wonderful nonetheless. After returning from Dublin in early February, I managed to get out on the Skateway a total of 11 times. Now that I can look back on some wonderful times.

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The Flags Unfurl in Fergus

The Flags Unfurl in Fergus

There are some advantages to hosting a kilt skate in the home of one of North America’s great Scottish festivals.

The Fergus Scottish Festival and Highland Games has been a major tourist attraction in central Ontario since 1946. They are preparing to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the festival by inaugurating a winter event: Fergus’s first annual Great Canadian Kilt Skate.

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