Outdoor fun isn't always easy to find during the coldest, darkest months of the year. But Jeremy Sibold has a slippery solution: Each year, the dad of two builds a 1200-square-foot ice rink in his family's Essex Junction backyard.
To start, Sibold cuts sheets of plywood in half, making enough 4-by-4-foot panels to serve as walls for a 30-by-40-foot rink. He supports the walls with metal and wooden garden stakes. Then he covers the ground within the rink with a plastic liner; this will hold water in the frame until it turns to ice. The liner costs $80 to $100 and can last up to two years. The Sibolds let water from the garden hose run into the rink for six to eight hours until it's two to four inches deep. Then, they wait for the liquid-to-solid transformation.
Ben Sibold, 8, doesn't play ice hockey, but he loves to skate just as much as his hockey-playing big brother, Sam, 10. Their dad says the rink is at its best in the dark. "On a winter night, we'll get a fire going outside and the lights shining on the rink," he says. "Neighbors and friends stop by, and all the kids will be skating. We love it, and it really isn't that much work."
Parents: Jeremy and Sonya SiboldKids: Sam, 10, Ben, 8
Tips for backyard rink success:
This article was originally published in Seven Days' monthly parenting magazine, Kids VT.
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