Schools
'Holy Crud, It is So Steep,' St. Thomas Academy Priest Says After Skating Crashed Ice
The Rev. Nels Gjengdahl skated the first couple peaks and valley of the Crashed Ice course last week, at the invitation of St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman.
In the video, filmed by a St. Thomas Academy student on Jan. 24, the Rev. Nels Gjengdahl is perched about two thirds the way up the opening ramp of the Crashed Ice course. (St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman invited the theology teacher to skate a segment of the race.)
He releases the railing reluctantly and skates down the ice track, dipping, rising, dipping, rising. Then he stumbles and backslides skates first, slowing as he reaches the parabola's vertex. As he comes to a stop, he turns his masked face toward the cameraman and sticks out his rigid gloves in an approximation of a thumbs up.
The voice behind the camera asks Gjengdahl what was the hardest part.
Find out what's happening in Mendota Heightsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
"The ice is uneven, itβs very choppy," he says. βI was thinking to myself, βYeah, yeah, get up there a few times then weβll do the top.ββ Gjendahl gives a breathless shake of his head. βHoly Crud, it is so steep.β
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.
