In honour of “Go Skate Day”, on June 21, Press reporter Pat Lemoine headed to Shaw Millennium Park to ask skateboarders their thoughts on helmet usage.
Tag Archives: skateboarding
Bonavista Down and dirty

1418 Lake Ontario Road, Bonavista, Calgary.
A small, outdoor sporting complex complete with tennis courts, a basketball court, a baseball diamond, and a healthy amount of greenery. Along the west side of the park sits the Bonavista Downs community hall; hidden in its shadow the Bonavista Downs do-it-yourself skatepark.
Through the assorted grass and courts, there is a sign on a fence — use of safety equipment highly recommended, no drugs or alcohol, USE AT YOUR OWN RISK.
Scribbled in the margins, bye Marcel.
It’s nearly 1 p.m. on a Thursday in June, and a kid, maybe ten years old, is helmet-clad and pumping his way up and down the park’s largest of three half-pipes. He says he’s homeschooled and on his lunch break. He lives within walking (or skating) distance and says that skateboarding is his favourite thing to do.
Shortly after, he leaves, and is replaced by Will Henley, who drove.
Henley is a business student at Mount Royal University, and he says he likes to come to the Bonavista D.I.Y. when it’s quiet.
Henley starts to skate, showing off his repertoire of tricks for the camera, a symbiotic relationship as old as film and sports.
Henley says he skates this park often, and that he knows the local crew well enough. He mentions Marcel, and how he was the driving factor in developing the park.
Marcel had started a GoFundMe for the park in 2019 and he started to seem like he was a guy worth talking to.
Jeremiah Morrison agreed.
Morrison currently serves as the vice-president for the Bonavista Downs Community Association (BDCA) and was president during Marcel’s reign as “The Guy”.
“[Marcel] was my contact,” said Morrison, “He would tell me what the skateboarders were after, or issues they were having, or whatever.”
“Whenever we would do a build day, he would ensure that all of his friends and the other skateboarders came out.”
Everything in the skatepark stems from volunteer efforts. The BDCA hosts “build days” where members of the community come together to help modify the park and its features. Henley joked that most of the features were built by kid’s dads.
While there is certainly some truth to that, the Bonavista Downs skatepark has also received much support from external organizations.
According to Morrison, they have received support from The Inside, a faith-based skateboarding organization; New Line Skateparks, who donated the parks half-pipes; and Knight Custom Homes whose staff often volunteers on build days.
As well, the Bonavista Downs D.I.Y. received funds through the Activate YYC grant program — an organization that describes itself as a “tactical urbanism microgrant initiative” and is run by the Federation of Calgary Communities.
This year the park is also receiving donations from the Calgary Parking Authority, which may be a bit of solace for skateboarders with a certain talent for racking up parking tickets.
It may also warm the heart of Marcel, who is no longer in Calgary to witness the outpouring of support.
Marcel Jimenez now lives in Toronto, Ontario.

Whilst in Calgary, Jimenez worked as a camp counsellor for Riders on Board, coordinated efforts to build up the Bonavista Downs D.I.Y., and organized the aforementioned GoFundMe.
“We ended up raising about 250 bucks and I put that into building the mani pad and a little down-ledge that used to be there, but it ended up getting fully destroyed,” said Jimenez.
“The people that come in are from all sports, like scooters or skateboards or BMX, a lot of this stuff isn’t built for that wide variety.”
Although many credit Jimenez for his work with the park, it preceded him by quite a while. According to Jimenez himself, the D.I.Y. park has existed in different iterations for at least 14 years.
When Jimenez first found the park with the help of local skater and childhood friend Jackson Sluiter, it was an assortment of small, odd features — including a teeter-totter-esque rail that Jimenez named “the craziest thing ever”.
“We would skate from our houses [up the hill], and then bomb the hill every day,” said Jimenez, “and then there’s the church on the right side of the road when you come down that has a stair over a four-block, and a little mani pad outside the back and then there’s also a little gap [jump].”
“You go up all of the aspects of skating on the way to this park every day. Everybody would be like, oh, why don’t you come skate Swood (a.k.a. Southwood skate park) or (Shaw) Millennium or whatever?”
“I’m like, I gotta get a bus, go an hour downtown [or] I can just skate half a block through all these spots, and then go skate at a park that never has anybody [there] and I can feel at home.”
Jimenez started off the video call gushing about the D.I.Y. scene in Toronto, calling the parks there “just like what [he] wanted the (Bonavista) Downs to be” except that he didn’t have to put in the work into developing them.
By the time the call is wrapping up, Jimenez was nostalgic.
“Thank you so much for reaching out, that really made my day— for sharing and bringing…,” here, Jimenez pauses, “[For] bringing me back to what made me the person I am today.”

Business profile: Deviant Skateboards
“I don’t like seeing kids trying to learn on a crappy board, that just hurts my soul.”
Robert Aguirre, an ex-professional skateboarder, is the founder of Deviant Skateboards, a Calgary based skateboard company. Formed eight years ago in June of 2014, Deviant describes itself as a “raw skateboard company doing what we want, while supplying the best quality skateboards and apparel”.
A deviant is a person who “differs markedly, as in social adjustment or behavior, from what is considered normal or acceptable”. Aguirre does his best to espouse these values.
A scroll through the company’s social media feeds brings a visual assault of vulgarity, blood, and skin. The first board the brand ever designed came in three variants: one depicting the grim reaper, the next of a masked woman holding a gun to her lips, and the third featuring the pope juxtaposed over a pentagram.
Eight years later the brand is still making similar designs, but are now often collaborating with local artists.
In 2021, Deviant teamed up with Calgary tattooist Nathan Harker to create the “Pig Stopper” graphic, depicting a decapitated pig wearing a police officer’s hat.
In 2018 they hired local model Alanna Pearson to create a four-year anniversary deck design, issuing a run of skateboards featuring the mostly nude Pearson. She was also featured heavily in the brands social media campaigns in a run of advertisements that might stupefy even the staunchest libertine.
When Deviant welcomed team rider Derrick Timoshenko into the fold, they did so by issuing a deck featuring a grade school era picture of Timoshenko along with the tagline “Fucking Derrick Timoshenko”.
Aguirre certainly produces provocative designs for his decks, but he says that isn’t his priority.
“I want the best of the best,” said Aguirre, “I want my stock to be printed on the same stuff as my favorite brands, like Antihero and Supreme, and it has to be the same [quality] or I don’t want to do it.”
“I refuse to do anything budget.”
The other facet of Deviant is apparel. Unlike some other skateboard brands, Aguirre doesn’t see clothing as playing second fiddle to skateboards.
“High fashion is in skateboarding right now and fashion is a big part of skateboarding,” said Aguirre.
Aguirre says he has an eye for trends, and that a season or two ahead he “already knows the colours” that will sell.
Aguirre has also taken advantage of his new job with fashion giant Gucci to secure a partnership with an Italian wholesaler, from where Deviant will produce luxury products.
The first will be a Deviant branded cashmere toque, and will retail approximately C$200.
“You’re going to get cashmere with the label saying “Made in Italy, Florence””, said Aguirre, “and no other place is doing that.”
Aguirre is confident that his savviness in spotting trends will benefit the brand.
“[By] the end of the year, everyone should know what Deviant is.”
SK825 Skateboarding
SK825 magazine issue no.1 can be read on Flipsnack by clicking the link below.
The Penguin D.I.Y.

The Calgary community of Ramsay now has a skatepark, thanks to the efforts of some local die-hards. Named for a now demolished car wash across the street, the Penguin D.I.Y. is a large, concrete, vert-style bowl that is now “open” to the public — provided you can find it and that you have the gumption to drop in.
Construction on the bowl began September 2020, when Eddie Cooper was laid off from his job. With his newfound free time, he sought permission to add-on to an existing “Do-it-yourself” project in Calgary named “The Bridge”, which was built in 2006.
“I called up the guy and asked, “Would you mind if I came and built a few more features?”, but he wasn’t having any of it,” said Cooper.
“So, I figured I could just make my own.”
The full operation required about 30-40 volunteers, and several thousands of dollars in donations. In addition to a GoFundMe, the Penguin D.I.Y. also received support from local skate shop Ninetimes who sold special edition “Penguin” apparel.
Neighbours also helped — whether by allowing the builders access to their water hose and electricity, or by stopping by and vocalizing their support.
“No one gave us any shit, everyone is stoked,” said Ryan Stewart (aka J- Breezy), one of the park’s founders.
A lack of pushback from the community, or from the city who may or may not be fully aware of the park, allowed Stewart, Cooper, and company to focus on the actual construction — and not the bureaucracy often associated with building, well, anything within the city.
“I was skreeting the bowl and all I could keep thinking was “What do the people want?””, said Stewart.
Following a long day of construction, it is fair to say the Penguin D.I.Y. is precisely what the people wanted.
As the crew — which included a few skatepark builders from New Line skateparks who had come to help for the day — drank beer and skated the new bowl, dozens of pedestrians stopped by to have a look.
Cooper and Stewart have plans to expand the park to include a more “mellow” section, but that will come further down the line.
For now, they (and the Ramsay community) are just happy to have a place to skate.
