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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Saturday, August 27, 2005

Cool as ice

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By Catherine E. Toth
Advertiser Staff Writer

The Ice Palace rink is a casual hangout for tweens and teens, as well as a place to play hockey or hone your figure-skating moves.

Photos by JEFF WIDENER | The Honolulu Advertiser

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ICE PALACE

  • 4510 Salt Lake Blvd., in Stadium Mall
  • 487-9921, 488-3037; www.icepalacehawaii.com
  • Public skating: 10:45 a.m.-11 p.m. Saturdays, 10:45 a.m.-8 p.m. Sundays, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Mondays, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Tuesdays, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. and 6:30-11 p.m. Fridays; closed for maintenance this Monday and Tuesday
  • $7.50 general, $6.50 per person for groups of 25 or more

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    FIRST-TIME TIPS

  • Bring socks.
  • Try on skates. Measure your foot at the rental counter, then try on the skates. When lacing up, be sure it's snug around your ankle, with room in the toe area. Then stand up and bend your knees. You should be able to fit your index finger between your heel and the boot.
  • Dress in layers. It's cold in there. (We recommend jeans and a sweatshirt or jacket.) Gloves are optional.
  • There are lockers, but it's best to leave valuables at home. But bring cash to buy grinds or play video games.
  • Watchers don't pay: If you're chaperoning your child and won't be skating, you can enter free.

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    Holly Gauthier, 11, munches on pizza as she and friend Lasha Tamae, 12, wait for the Zamboni to freshen the rink.

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    A group of kids get safety instructions before hitting the ice last week.

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    It's summer — in Hawai'i, no less — and Ben Scheuring is dreaming about becoming a pro hockey player.

    He's never seen snow in his life. But the 13-year-old from Salt Lake has been skating for eight years already — at the Ice Palace in Stadium Mall.

    "It's pretty cool," said the Aliamanu Intermediate School eighth-grader, who went to a hockey camp in Minnesota this summer. "A lot of other places, kids play baseball in the summers. And here, I'm playing hockey all year-round. It's a lot of fun."

    Since it opened in 1982, the ice rink has become a fixture in Hawai'i. During these super-hot summer months, it may be the best place to truly chill out.

    On Tuesday, Scheuring, in board shorts and a T-shirt, was hanging out at the rink. There was nothing good on TV, he said. And besides, he'd rather lace up and hit the ice.

    "I have a lot of family and friends here, so whenever I come down I just have fun and talk to other people and make new friends."

    The 25,000-square-foot ice rink is home to hockey leagues, aspiring Olympians and thousands of birthday parties. Just this month it hosted the U.S. Figure Skating 2005 National Collegiate Championships, with participation by more than 40 universities and colleges. It was the first national figure skating competition held in Hawai'i.

    But the Ice Palace has long been a popular hangout for teens bored with the mall and multiplex. On weekend nights the place turns into an all-ages nightclub of sorts, with pumping music, swirling lights and lots of adrenaline.

    Scheuring is more about hockey, though.

    Sure, he likes to freeskate — and play football and paddle — but he can't shake his passion for hockey. Maybe it's in his genes: his father grew up playing hockey in Minnesota.

    Reach Catherine E. Toth at ctoth@honoluluadvertiser.com.