Bon-Ice-Skates-art - 11/24/18 "Winter Is Coming… Are Your Bone Ice Skates Ready?" by Lord Robert of Ferness. NOTE: See also the files: Curling-art, wintr-sports-lnks, lea-tanning-msg, leather-bib, shoemaking-msg, shoes-msg, bone-msg, Working-Horn-art, merch-a-parts-msg. ************************************************************************ NOTICE - This article was added to this set of files, called Stefan's Florilegium, with the permission of the author. These files are available on the Internet at: http://www.florilegium.org Copyright to the contents of this file remains with the author or translator. While the author will likely give permission for this work to be reprinted in SCA type publications, please check with the author first or check for any permissions granted at the end of this file. Thank you, Mark S. Harris...AKA:..Stefan li Rous stefan at florilegium.org ************************************************************************ This article was first published in the AEthelmearc Gazette on November 24, 2018. You can find more work by this author, including the most current version of this article on his webpage at: http://shoesbyrobert.com/ Winter Is Coming… Are Your Bone Ice Skates Ready? by Lord Robert of Ferness If not, you can learn about them here and consider making your own for use with whatever footwear you care to wear. They do not take long to make and it is or soon will be deer-hunting season, which may allow you to obtain fresh bones. Bone ice skates have a long, widespread history, going back to the Bronze Age and lasting up until the early 1900s in places where ice forms thick enough to support the weight of skaters. At least four period sources (two with illustrations) have left us descriptions of their use (and resulting consequences related to sports). The rest are outrun by those competitors in the race who attach to the soles of their feet the shin-bones of deer thoroughly smoothed and greased with pork fat, since, when the cold drops of water rise as it were through the pores of the ice during fierce cold, the bones smeared in this way cannot be hampered or kept in check, as iron can however much it is polished or greased.- Olaus Magnus, 1555, Description of the Northern Peoples, Book I, Chapter 25. (Translated from Latin by P. Fisher and H. Higgens.) Others there are, more skilled to sport upon the ice, who fit to their feet the shin-bones of beasts, lashing them beneath their ankles, and with iron-shod poles in their hands they strike ever and anon against the ice and are borne along swift as a bird in flight or a bolt shot from mangonel. But sometimes two by agreement run one against the other from a great distance, and, raising their poles, strike one another. One or both fall, not without bodily harm, since on falling they are borne a long way in opposite directions by the force of their own motion; and wherever the ice touches the head, it scrapes and skins it entirely. Often he that falls breaks arm or shin, if he fall upon it. But youth is an age greedy of renown, yearning for victory, and exercises itself in mimic battles that it may bear itself more boldly in true combats. – William FitzStephen, ca. 1173, A Description of the Most Noble City of London. (Translated from Latin by L. Gourde.) Illustrations from Olaus Magnus Cow and horse metatarsal (shin) bones make up the vast majority of skates found archaeologically. The remaining 10% or so come from deer, sheep, or goats. The latter likely served youth or children rather than adults, given their smaller size. Fresh bones retaining some of their original fatty material seem to work better than dried-out ones, however it may be possible to recondition those or apply fat or grease to them in order to reduce their friction with the ice. When using bone skates, one does not push off to the side as with a modern metal blade. Instead, one stands on the bones and pushes backward with a metal-tipped pole between one’s legs. (Using a metal-tipped pole in each hand may be an alternate way to propel oneself.) Note that it is not necessary to strap the skates to one’s footwear, although that can be done. Many surviving skates have no attachment holes and others have only a front one. Some sport a front hole as well as a small wood or metal peg projecting from the rear end of the bone. Embroidered shoes on bone ice skates Close-ups of wearing the shoes with skates Bone skates recovered archaeologically often show evidence of shaping the front by angling upward and/or inward, presumably to better push aside snow on the ice. Some bottoms show evidence of flattening, and some tops have been modified by making them rougher in order to better grip the smooth leather of a shoe or boot sole. People used axes or grindstones to gain the desired shape. (Based on trying both, I recommend a hatchet. You do not want to smell freshly ground bone. Ever.) The author wearing turnshoes on bone ice skates My recent project documentation for a pair of white-tailed deer bone ice skates and shoes to go with them can be viewed for more details, photos, and an extensive bibliography. https://www.academia.edu/37589426/10th-Century_Embroidered_Turnshoes_on_Bone_Ice_Skates.pdf See a video of me trying them on ice, demonstrating the use of a pole for propulsion. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lqxlzanHsWQ ------ Copyright 2018 by Ken Stuart. . Permission is granted for republication in SCA-related publications, provided the author is credited. Addresses change, but a reasonable attempt should be made to ensure that the author is notified of the publication and if possible receives a copy. If this article is reprinted in a publication, please place a notice in the publication that you found this article in the Florilegium. I would also appreciate an email to myself, so that I can track which articles are being reprinted. Thanks. -Stefan. Edited by Mark S. Harris Bon-Ice-Skates-art 2 pf 5