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The Rise of Roller Skating

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How roller-skating became the sport du jour of the pandemic

CLAIRE BRNJAC Arts & Culture Editor ANNIKA MCFARLANE Illustrator

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Two months into quarantine, I made a roller rink in my dad’s garage.

The rink itself wasn’t a lot; it was just a clear space that was devoid of broken glass and dirt. When my skates arrived a month later, I tentatively strapped them on and made my dad move his car to the road while I wobbled my way around the small space in tight circles. Amateur as it felt, there was the thrill of freedom in the way I zoomed around. I got the idea to try roller-skating from a social media trend on the app TikTok, where beautiful, graceful people zoomed down streets and did tricks in cute skates without breaking a sweat. During the pandemic, other people did the same, causing stores like Roller Girl, a roller skate shop in Mount Pleasant, to have their highest sales in fifteen years.

To understand the fervour and to better understand how to learn a sport in quarantine, I talked to Carla Smith, the co-founder of Rolla Skate Club, a Vancouver-based rollerskating facility, who had noticed this jump in popularity as well.

“In our first month back, we had almost “Not [just] roller derby,” she said, “There’s a hundred people come through our roller dance, and roller workout.” Smith introductory class pass,” Smith said, noting got her start making roller-skating workout Rolla Skate Club’s introductory online, and videos before the pandemic, so she sees now in-person, lesson packages. “So, there the current pivot to video-making as a is definitely a backlog of people who are Groundhog Day-like scenario, but a much interested to come in, and people were eager.” scarier circumstance.

When asked why roller-skating in particular seemed to have gained popularity, Smith shrugged. “It's a very good socially distant thing to do nowadays.

Like, if you can put on a pair of rollerskates and go onto the bike path or down your street or onto a tennis court, it’s great. It's a great way to get outside and be active.” She mentions that it’s a community-driven sport as well—the roller derby scene in Vancouver is one she cherishes, as she got her start in it when she first came to Vancouver in 2007.

“In March, we started literally in our living rooms like, okay, how can I get my camera set up? We were lucky enough to be able to get some space for that in the Roller Girl basement, so we have kind of like a little recording studio down there.” She sees them continuing their dual Zoom call classes and pre-recorded videos in the future. They are also in the process of starting up new learn-toskate packages and classes in their Kerrisdale location, and expanding into a new location in the Shipyards. Their rental skate service has a collection of over a hundred and fifty pairs of skates, in every size.

I asked if she had any advice for new rollerskaters like myself, wobbling our way through our own improvised set-up. She stood up and demonstrated a position that she calls the “Oh Shit Position,” where skaters in fear of falling crouch down and hug their knees to avoid hitting the ground.

If you can’t avoid falling? “Ideally, you have time to pick a cheek,” she laughs. “It’s the worst fall ever, but it happens a lot.”

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