The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.2009, Síða 24

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.2009, Síða 24
166 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Vol. 62 #3 arches. Foundations were poured under the direction of a local contractor, Kalli Vopni. School principal, Peter Onysko, early in what would be a remarkable 20 year career of leadership and success, stood alongside his senior students helping with the work. Frost was coming and it looked like the project would need to be postponed, when the cry for the big final push came forth. A solid volunteer force of carpenters, fisher- men and farmers was mobilized under the leadership of Oli Olafson who drove the project to completion, except for the wiring. The young electricians, Benedictson, Collins, and Johnson ‘came to the rescue’ and completed the enormous amount of wiring needed for a building of this magnitude. Building this rink was a remarkable achievement for a community of its size, at this time and undoubtedly one of the very first communities in Manitoba to do so. The opening was made an even greater success by the presence of the skaters from the Winnipeg Winter Club. They were Pickerel • Salmon • Crab Shrimp • Goldeye • Lobster • Hardfiskur and more! We pack for travel 596 Dufferin Avenue 589-3474 625 Pembina Hwy h__________________6 there through the leadership of Solli Thorvaldson, then a prominent Winnipeg lawyer and soon to become a well known Senator, but first and foremost, a son of Riverton whose father Sveinn Thorvaldson had been one of the cornerstones of the community over many decades. That began a long relationship between the Riverton Ice Club and the Winnipeg Winter Club which provided both the skating instruc- tors and guest performers each year at the annual carnivals. When my Afi opened the fourth annual carnival on February 27, 1953 he was able to report that the rink now had been further developed with the addition of a time clock, bleachers and the completion of the upstairs club rooms with hard wood floors and drapes. Soon the ‘clubrooms’ were the home of everything from the international organization of country women known as the Women’s Institute (the “WI”), to the social center of the big bonspiels when the ice surface was turned into an additional curling rink for three days each year. No childhood memory is more alive than the endless hours I spent in that rink, starting as a little boy where I waited my turn on the bench for my skates to be tied tight by Walter Kornick, the first caretaker. Those were the days when the term care- taker was tantamount to caregiver and in Walter’s wake came Dori and Margaret Bjornson, who were like surrogate mother and father to most of the kids in the village. Hockey was big in Riverton, very big, and the Riverton Lions roared across the Interlake, particularly roused as they entered the arenas in the neighboring towns of Arborg and Gimli. My typical routine had me coaching the peewees after school and playing hockey every night from 7 to 11 each day of the week except games on Friday night and Sunday evening. No one escaped the clutches of the Riverton Figure Skating Club and the women like my mom Sylvia who ran it and most certainly not the aspiring young hockey players. I proudly made my debut as Gus Gus the Mouse in Cinderella in the carnival of 1954. Often I think it was figure skating that taught us to skate powerfully, erect and not bent over in typical hockey

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