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Author Topic: Patinoire R. Bozon, Chamonix, France  (Read 4777 times)

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Offline nicklaszlo

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Patinoire R. Bozon, Chamonix, France
« on: November 02, 2019, 10:02:46 PM »
I didn't bring my skates to this rink because the skating club advised me by email that they had no ice time during my visit.

The first thing to know about this rink is that it is difficult to find.  To get to it, I suggest going to the front entrance of the Bozon sports center, turning around, and walking back the way you came. 

The location is fantastically beautiful.

The rink itself is old and a bit sad.  The bathrooms were in poor condition.  I looked several times and the ice was always in poor condition.  There is a schedule for cutting the ice, which shows that it's done very rarely.

During public skate they have ridiculous barriers blocking off the middle of the ice.  I can understand having a protected area for beginners, but this is totally impractical. 

A picture is attached.

Offline Loops

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Re: Patinoire R. Bozon, Chamonix, France
« Reply #1 on: November 03, 2019, 03:33:26 PM »
Our rink does something similar to this for kids during public sessions, but at one of the ends rather than the center.  It doesn't stop the icefreestylers from messing around in there.....

France is slowly updating its rinks. The older ones are terribly sad. Louviers ( a town in Western France, Normandy),and Angers are the most recent to get an update, with new rinks that just opened this September. The calibre of the update, as far as I can tell, is directly related to the calibre of the local hockey team.  Angers is getting a really nice complex.  Louviers, while I'm sure it's nice, is not getting the same. My city's was updated about 15 years ago. We have a single slab, and stadium seating on one side of the ice (we have a mediocre, but well loved, hockey team).  2 slabs, like they're doing these days, would have been appreciated, and well used here.  I bet the newer rinks anywhere in the Alps are fantastic.

I would have been surprised if they'd have let you skate on anything other than a public session.  All sports require a license and insurance in case of injuries goes through that.  Plus all lessons are group lessons, so they wouldn't have known what to do with you. I suspect it would have been the same in Italy.

Nice that you're doing some rink tourism!