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DUK10163016_012
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 12 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_011
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 12 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_010
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 12 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_009
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 13 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_008
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 12 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_007
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 10 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_006
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 12 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_005
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 10 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_004
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 10 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_003
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 12 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_002
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 12 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee ! -
DUK10163016_001
DIY Eiskarussell: Die kanadische Skateboard-Legende Ryan Decenzo hat mit seinem Team die eisige Fläche des Coon Lake in Minnesota in einen einzigartigen rotierenden Skatepark verwandelt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
Canadian skateboarding legend Ryan Decenzo has created his own revolving boardpark on ice.
While most retreat indoors when lakes freeze over, Decenzo and his crew have transformed the icy expanse of Coon Lake, Minnesota, into a spinning skatepark like no other.
His latest YouTube release captures the audacious feat, showcasing how he, alongside fellow skaters TJ Rogers and Torey Pudwill, tackled an ice carousel—an enormous, rotating slab of ice cut from the lake’s surface.
The ambitious DIY project, engineered with the expertise of ice carousel specialist Paul Miller, featured a series of challenging obstacles: a spinning goal post with a precarious gap, a rotating quarterpipe that disoriented even the most seasoned skaters, and a circular rail demanding supreme precision.
The trio battled freezing temperatures, unpredictable movement, and the limitations of their equipment—wax refusing to stick in sub-zero conditions, water splashing onto their gear, and daylight dwindling as they attempted increasingly complex manoeuvres.
Ice carousels, a tradition originating in Finland, have long been a feature of winter festivities across North America, evolving from simple ice-cutting experiments into record-breaking engineering marvels.
Communities in Canada and the US have embraced them, crafting giant spinning platforms for ice fishing, bonfires, music festivals, and now, skateboarding.
In 2023, the largest ice carousel to date—measuring an astonishing 541 metres across—was cut in Maine. Decenzo’s latest project pushes the boundaries of what’s possible on these frozen arenas, proving that skateboarding is not confined to the streets and that innovation knows no seasonal limits.
Where: Coon Lake, Minnesota, United States
When: 12 Feb 2025
Credit: Jonathan Mehring / Red Bull Content Pool/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDI
(c) Dukas - Double Fee !