Below, is probably the four most important decisions to make before ordering or starting to build your NiceRink. Determining the best site for your ice rink There are just a few items of importance to consider when choosing the best site for your rink. To start, you want to locate your rink near an easily accessible water source. This will make it much easier when it’s time to flood and resurface your rink. Second to water, would be the distance away from the house. You want the rink to be close enough to enjoy having it in your backyard and not having to trudge across the field, although you want it far enough away from stray pucks in the case of any hockey being played. The rink should run parallel to the house if possible, to avoid pucks being shot directly at the house. Next would be the pitch or levelness of your sight. The pitch may be more important if you a) want a nice clean looking rink or b) don’t want to end up filling your rink with 30,000 gallons of water. A site that has a pitch of 6” or less is best, as it will take less effort to install the side boards, will use less water and take less time to get your base ice going. The last major point would be the size of your rink. The open space you have available will be the single biggest determining factor of how big you can make your rink. Budget and appearance will be the next. Let’s do a quick recap and go over the four major factors and go into more detail on each factor separately. Access to water Convenience of use Pitch (Levelness) of the rink site Size of the rink Access to water is important, not when setting up because it’s not –5 degrees out and your hose won’t freeze up. Later in the season it will be to your advantage to have the rink close by, as the farther away the water is, the farther you’ll have to haul your hose. When it’s 10 degrees outside, you’ll be glad you don’t have to haul out 300’ of hose every time you want to resurface. It’s nice to be able to set your hose outside the house, hook it up and resurface. Two good items to have available are either a hose reel or large plastic bucket (muck bucket or garbage can). When your done resurfacing you’ll need to bring your hose back inside so it doesn’t freeze solid. When the hose is brought inside, it will have some water left in it. If you have the hose reel, most of the water will be dispersed while winding it up, or if you have the hose bucket, the water that may drain out will be nicely contained within your container leaving no mess. Convenience of use is why you are or are not considering building your own ice rink in the first place, so make it as convenient as possible. Out the door and on the ice is best, but you have to consider windows, doors opening and viewing the rink from inside. My rink is about 20’ from the house, which makes it great for viewing from the whole house. We can see everywhere on the rink from any facing window, which is nice when you can just let the children out to skate and easily watch for any mishaps while warmly conversing with friends and neighbors. It’s also nice to walk out, set the kids on the rink and hop back inside. Then if the kids get cold, hop out and back in again. Also you won’t have to shovel a very long path to the rink, although the path gets well worn out without any shoveling anyway. Pitch of the rink site may be more important to some than others as previously mentioned. If you have a nice level site to work with, all the better. When your site is level the sides will be very easy to put up, as opposed to a little more effort when the site is not level. A NiceRink can easily be built on ground that is not level as well. That’s why we created the NiceRink system of building a rink. Ninety Nine percent of yards will not be flat, as a yard that is perfectly flat does not have proper drainage away from the house and shouldn’t have water added onto it because it may cause flooding problems in the spring. My yard currently has an 18” pitch, which is quite a bit, but we have clients that have built rinks with 30” of pitch with no problems. You just have to make your sideboards higher and stronger to support the weight of the water on the deep end. We’ll go over that later on in the instructions. My current rink is 55’ x 85’, and with the 18” of pitch it used to take myself and a friend about 3-4 hours to complete the old way of stake & sideboard construction and about 30-40 minutes to lay out the liner. With the NiceRink brackets, it only takes about 1.5 –2 hours to set up the boards! That’s easily less than 50% of the time it takes to spray the rink to completion and get the ice surface you’ll get from a single, time saving flood. The nice thing about filling a NiceRink liner to get a base, is that your ice surface will always be level to start with, as water will always seek its own level. No more skating up, down and over hills! Size of the rink should be determined by several factors. The first factor is your available space. If you have the space and budget, go big. You’ll enjoy your rink much more when you have more room, especially when you have skating parties (which I can assure you, you will). Everybody will have plenty of room to skate around without bumping into each other. If you’re not sure if you’ll use your rink enough to make it worth your while, start smaller. You can always decide to go bigger in a year or two, and continue to use the boards and equipment that have already been purchased. Besides space and budget, the people that will be using the rink will determine the size as well. When your rink is just for children, you can go smaller and be very satisfied, as they don’t need a huge rink to make it feel huge to them. On the other hand, if you’re an experienced skater yourself, you’ll be able to cover a 30’ span rather easily with one stride, which doesn’t end up being really fun if you’re an avid adult skater. The choice is entirely up to you, the “rink manager”, but I can tell you I’ve heard time after time, “I sure wish we would’ve went bigger!” Also keep in mind when deciding size, that plywood and our NEW plastic boards come in 8’ and 4’ sections respectively. This means rinks with widths and lengths divisible by eight or four are the easiest to put up and will have less wasted material. Ordering the NiceRink liner is a very simple affair. After determining what size rink you’d like, add 5’ to the length and 5’ to the width to get your liner size. Examples: 35’ x 45’ rinks requires a 40’ x 50’ liner, a 55’ x 95’ rink requires and 60’ x 100’ liner. This will give you 2.5’ of liner around the entire perimeter of your rink to go up the inside the edge of the boards to contain the water/ice. As mentioned in our NiceRink pricing, the sizes of liner available are dependent upon which liner type you select. NiceRink #1 material is available in widths of; 20’,30’,35’,40’,50’,60’,70’,80’,90’ and so on by any length. When the width of a NiceRink #1 liner is over 70’, the width must be the 10’ increment. For NiceRink #3 material, the liners can be ordered in widths of 24’, 30’, 36’, 48’, 54’, 60’, 72’, 78’, 84’, 96’, 102’,108’,120’,126’,132’ by length increments of 5’, starting at 50’. The NiceRink “CheapSkate” material is available in widths of 32’, 40’, 50’ and now 60’ by any length. NiceRink - Liners NiceRink™ I · Recommended for Your Backyard Our original ice rink lining material offers an engineered, triple laminated, pre-stressed, high density polyethylene sheet. NiceRink I material is over 200% more puncture resistant than regular 6 mil plastic, which is excellent for its weight and has an unbelievable cold crack of -70F. Available in widths of 20, 30, 35, 40, 50, 60, 70, foot stock by any length. Wider widths available upon request. NiceRink™ III · Recommended for Park & Recreation Applications NiceRink #3, our ultimate ice rink lining material has excellent puncture resistance, in conjunction with an improved -70F cold crack. Added reinforcing filaments within the body of the material prevent further tearing or "zippering", which means any cut that happens to get into a NiceRink #3 liner will remain small, meaning less patching to do in the summer. Available in 6 foot increments by any length. NCRS Economy Value Liners 'Cheap Skates' This Super-white 6 mil film is offered as a less expensive alternative to our standard ultra-strong liners. We have stepped up our efforts to provide a lower cost alternative in a wide width "super-white" full 6 mil film. This liner should be considered a single season liner, and is not recommended for severely sloped sites. It is available in widths of 32, 40, and 48 feet X any length. |