We’ve been hitting the minuses most of last week and over the weekend (and in a lot of the week coming!) which can only mean one thing. Veel ijs!
The canals have frozen over, thick enough that you can walk on it. Alternatively, if you are a Nederlander, then you will probably be dusting off your own personal ice skates and showing off your moves on the ice.
Before I moved here, I already knew that it was quite a popular sport in the Netherlands to ice skate, or schaatsen, especially speed skating. I had heard about people skating on the frozen canals and ponds, but I guess seeing it in person (and actually walking across the ice myself!) is still pretty magical. Your inner child bursts out of you without warning. My boyfriend was as giddy as anything and is very keen to make sure that we both buy our own skates!
In order for the canals to be declared as safe to skate on, it is said that we are to have at least three nights of -10 degrees Celsius (or less than 14 degrees Fahrenheit for any readers from the US, Bahamas, Cayman Islands or Palau!).
Also, whenever the temperatures start dropping below freezing, a lot of skating clubs start speculating whether there will be any natural ice competitions, and so start spraying concrete tracks with water (letting them ice over) in order to practice! This includes speculation of Elfstedentocht...
Also known as the “eleven cities tour”. This ultra rare event is something sought after by many of the Dutch and Frisian folk held as both a speed skating competition (where about 300 contestants take place) and also a leisure skating tour. All skaters must be members of the Association of the Eleven Frisian Cities, and you must have a starting permit. Skaters have to collect a stamp in each city, and at three secret check points, and must finish the course before midnight.
The reason that that this event is so rare is that it is purely determined on the weather conditions and thickness of the ice on the canals (at least 15cm!). It’s held in the North of the Netherlands, in the province of Friesland, and the race/tour takes you across the eleven historical cities of the province. The course varies depending on the quality of the ice, but the cities include: Leeuwarden, Sneek, IJst, Sloten, Stavoren, Hindeloopen, Workum, Bolsward, Harlingen, Franeker, Dokkum... and then back to Leeuwarden!
The first Elfstedentocht took place in 1909, but the last official event was in 1997. Women weren’t allowed to race until 1985, before then they were only allowed to participate as amateurs and were not awarded any wins. There was an almost-Elfstedentocht in 2012, but it had to be called off due to temperatures increasing above freezing point too frequently. Fingers crossed that there may be one this year?! Or as the Frisian would say when there is potential for an ice race, “It giet oan!” (it’s on!).
One more beautiful thing that I’ve learnt about the Dutch and their natural ice skating. Being ijsvrij literally translates to being “ice free”. This is where you literally get an extra day off to enjoy ice skating!
Traditionally it was treated more like a snow day in the UK, where children were given time off school or workers unable to get to work due to the dangerous road conditions. The attitude towards this has changed over the years a bit and now a lot of companies allow for these days off as an act of generosity for their workers. Wat leuk!