Culture
Ice Skating at a Rink Is Fun. Gliding Through a Forest? Glorious.
OTTAWA — Regardless of how satisfying at first, whooshing spherical and around the constrained oval of an ice rink can get monotonous for even essentially the most die-hard skater.
However gliding on the ice via miles of pristine forest, with birds within the timber, paw prints of wildlife imprinted within the snow and a brand new discovery beckoning round each bend? That by no means will get previous to skaters in Ottawa, and ice trails winding via woodlots are multiplying in and across the metropolis, Canada’s capital, serving to fill what appears to be an insatiable demand there for brand new leisure skating choices.
“That is an precise childhood dream come true: to have the ability to skate anyplace you need,” mentioned Michelle Reid, who drove along with her husband, Lee Larson, for about two hours from Kingston, Ontario, to have a good time their twenty third wedding ceremony anniversary at Icelynd, which grew to become Ottawa’s sixth ice-trail community when it opened this January. “It’s journey by skate via a forest, as a substitute of circles on a rink.”
Chris Neil, a defenseman within the Nationwide Hockey League for 17 years, started slicing down timber final autumn to rework a patch of forest into Icelynd.
Chain saws in hand, he and certainly one of his enterprise companions, Jarrett Gibbons, plunged into the 25 acres of land that Mr. Neil owns. They needed to chart new paths via the forest as a result of the types of trails used for climbing, mountain biking, snow shoeing or cross-country snowboarding aren’t suited to skating. Slopes that might go unnoticed in any of these actions might imply water working downhill earlier than it will possibly freeze.
Extra worryingly, steep downhills could cause even skilled skaters to lose management — probably making a variation of ice cross downhill, the gladiatorial excessive sport through which contestants carrying full hockey gear plunge down ice tracks at speeds of as much as 45 miles an hour.
When Mr. Neil and Mr. Gibbons encountered surprising gradients as they felled timber, they have been pressured to desert path routes they’d typically spent days on — though there remained sufficient of a slope in the beginning of the path to offer even novice skaters a small style of Olympic speedskating.
Mr. Neil, 42, spent his whole N.H.L. profession with the Ottawa Senators, principally because the workforce’s enforcer, a participant extra prized for his means along with his fists than his goal-scoring talent. However he didn’t need Icelynd to be about hockey. He adopted the lead of all however one of many native ice path facilities and banned sticks and pucks from the paths.
Ottawa’s residents take a maybe perverse pleasure in residing in one of many world’s coldest capitals. On a bitterly chilly afternoon at Icelynd, there have been a number of younger boys sporting their workforce’s crimson and white hockey jerseys as they zipped round much less assured grownup skaters. Additionally making swift progress was Makalya Inexperienced, a scholar who was skating along with her father, Neil. As they moved alongside one lengthy straightaway, Makalya in contrast the expertise to snowmobiling.
“Besides it’s quieter,” her father added. “You’ll be able to hear all the things. The ice cracking, the wind within the timber.” Referring to the temperature in Celsius, he added: “On a minus 20-something day, what else you going to do?”
A number of different skaters, together with a household gathered round one of many hearth pits dotted across the circuit, additionally praised this newcomer to the world’s skating scene, however famous that its trails have been narrower than the unique path middle within the capital area: the 3-kilometer path of Patinage en Forêt in Lac des Loups, Quebec, north of Ottawa.
When it opened slightly over 5 years in the past, that path’s proprietor, Dave Mayer, mentioned he anticipated that the path, constructed throughout what had been his household’s farmland, would possibly draw 3,000 individuals in its first season. However extra individuals than that confirmed up the primary weekend.
To compete in opposition to the free canal, the for-profit skate path operators have harnessed two approaches for persuading individuals to pay. In contrast to the canal skateway, which cuts via the guts of Ottawa’s downtown, the personal initiatives promote themselves as a visit to the woods.
Mr. Mayer and Mr. Neil additionally purpose to make their path ice smoother than that of the canal. Cracks on the canal — shaped when temperature fluctuations heave the ice — can seize skates, requiring paramedic patrols, typically in miniature on-ice ambulances.
Mr. Neil had a head begin on retaining the floor of his ice easy. Atypical even in Canada, each he and his enterprise accomplice already owned their very own ice-surfacing machines — much like the Zambonis that seem between durations at N.H.L. video games — to care for his or her households’ at-home rinks.
However skaters have singled out for reward the smoothness of the ice at Patinage en Forêt. Mr. Mayer mentioned it took him a lot trial and error to find the key to creating kilometers of easy, sturdy ice within the woods. He declined to disclose his components, nevertheless it includes a water tanker outfitted on the rear with modified nozzles much like these utilized by firefighters, along with an ice surfacing machine.
As a result of the canal and all of the out of doors trails depend on pure ice, local weather change is a giant menace to their viability.
The canal and all the paths depend on pure ice. For the Rideau Canal Skateway, which welcomes as much as 1.5 million skaters a 12 months, that’s meant seasons in recent times as brief as 18 skating days in 2016, effectively under the historic common of about 50 days.
This winter, a number of unseasonal thaws and rain storms shut down all of the for-profit trails for just a few days. Seasonal opening and shutting dates are troublesome to foretell, complicating enterprise plans.
The Nationwide Capital Fee, the federal company answerable for overseeing the canal skating, started working this 12 months with engineers and scientists at Carleton College to search out methods to increase, or a minimum of protect, the season. This season, the canal was open for 41 days, earlier than closing on March 5.
One chilly morning, earlier than getting down to survey the canal’s ice utilizing floor penetrating radar, Shawn Kenny, an affiliate professor in civil and environmental engineering, mentioned there’s little risk of extending the season as March will get hotter, earlier.
However, he mentioned, the analysis workforce is contemplating methods to permit for an earlier opening, together with by spraying slush on the canal to construct up the ice up extra shortly.
Whereas different Canadian communities have ice trails, no place boasts as many as Ottawa. So when Icelynd opened in January, Mr. Mayer was not happy to have one other competitor.
Icelynd not solely has the benefit of its affiliation with an area hockey legend, nevertheless it’s additionally only a fast drive away for a lot of Ottawa residents.
Lac des Loups, in contrast, is about an hour from town middle, so Mr. Mayer depends on each the status of his easy ice to attract prospects, in addition to novel occasions, like torchlight skating nights, additionally supplied at Arrowhead Provincial Park in Huntsville, Ontario.
Along with the brand new competitors, Mr. Mayer additionally confronted one other problem this winter: Starting in late January, a convoy of vans and vehicles blockaded downtown Ottawa’s streets in a raucous protest in opposition to pandemic restrictions. Police quickly closed many of the bridges to Quebec. On the few that have been left open, gridlock led to hourslong delays.
However simply earlier than he headed out for the winter’s remaining night time of sweeping and flooding, Mr. Mayer mentioned he was nonetheless completely satisfied along with his season and optimistic concerning the subsequent.
“It was truly a really, superb 12 months,” Mr. Mayer mentioned. “So, yeah, I’d say that we’re in enterprise subsequent 12 months.”
Culture
Could Monkeys Really Type All of Shakespeare?
Science doesn’t usually tolerate frivolity, but the infinite monkey theorem enjoys an exception. The question it poses is thoroughly outlandish: Could an infinite number of monkeys, each given an infinite amount of time to peck away at a typewriter (stocked with an infinite supply of paper, presumably) eventually produce, by pure chance, the complete works of William Shakespeare?
The problem was first described in a 1913 paper by the French mathematician Émile Borel, a pioneer of probability theory. As modernity opened new scientific fronts, approaches to the theorem also evolved. Today, the problem pulls in computer science and astrophysics, among other disciplines.
In 1979, The New York Times reported on a Yale professor who, using a computer program to try to prove this “venerable hypothesis,” managed to produce “startlingly intelligible, if not quite Shakespearean” strings of text. In 2003, British scientists put a computer into a monkey cage at the Paignton Zoo. The outcome was “five pages of text, primarily filled with the letter S,” according to news reports. In 2011, Jesse Anderson, an American programmer, ran a computer simulation with much better results, albeit under conditions that — like the Yale professor’s — mitigated chance.
A new paper by Stephen Woodcock, a mathematician at the University of Technology Sydney, suggests that those efforts may have been for naught: It concludes that there is simply not enough time until the universe expires for a defined number of hypothetical primates to produce a faithful reproduction of “Curious George,” let alone “King Lear.” Don’t worry, scientists believe that we still have googol years — 10¹⁰⁰, or 1 followed by 100 zeros — until the lights go out. But when the end does come, the typing monkeys will have made no more progress than their counterparts at the Paignton Zoo, according to Dr. Woodcock.
“It’s not happening,” Dr. Woodcock said in an interview. The odds of a monkey typing out the first word of Hamlet’s famous “To be or not to be” soliloquy on a 30-key keyboard was 1 in 900, he said. Not bad, one could argue — but every new letter offers 29 fresh opportunities for error. The chances of a monkey spelling out “banana” are “approximately 1 in 22 billion,” Dr. Woodcock said.
The idea for the paper came to Dr. Woodcock during a lunchtime discussion with Jay Falletta, a water-usage researcher at the University of Technology Sydney. The two were working on a project about washing machines, which strain Australia’s extremely limited water resources. They were “a little bit bored” by the task, Dr. Woodcock acknowledged. (Mr. Falletta is a co-author on the new paper.)
If resources for washing clothes are limited, why shouldn’t typing monkeys be similarly constrained? By neglecting to impose a time or monkey limit on the experiment, the infinite monkey theorem essentially contains its own cheat code. Dr. Woodcock, on the other hand, opted for a semblance of reality — or as much reality as a scenario featuring monkeys trying to write in iambic pentameter would allow — in order to say something about the interplay of order and chaos in the real world.
Even if the life span of the universe were extended billions of times, the monkeys would still not accomplish the task, the researchers concluded. Their paper calls the infinite monkey theorem “misleading” in its fundamental assumptions. It is a fitting conclusion, perhaps, for a moment when human ingenuity seems to be crashing hard against natural constraints.
Low as the chances are of a monkey spelling out “banana,” they are still “an order of magnitude which is in the realm of our universe,” Dr. Woodcock said. Not so with longer material such as the children’s classic “Curious George” by Margret Rey and H.A. Rey, which contains about 1,800 words. The chances of a monkey replicating that book are 1 in 10¹⁵⁰⁰⁰ (a 1 followed by 15,000 zeros). And, at nearly 836,000 words, the collected plays of Shakespeare are about 464 times longer than “Curious George.”
“If we replaced every atom in the universe with a universe the size of ours, it would still be orders of magnitude away from making the monkey typing likely to succeed,” Dr. Woodcock said.
Like other monkey theorem enthusiasts, Dr. Woodcock mentioned a famous episode of “The Simpsons,” in which the crusty plutocrat C. Montgomery Burns tries the experiment, only to fly into a fury when a monkey mistypes the opening sentence of Charles Dickens’s “A Tale of Two Cities.” In reality, the monkey’s achievement (“It was the best of times, it was the blurst of times”) would have been a stunning triumph over randomness.
Outside cartoons, such successes are unlikely. First, there is cosmic death to consider. Many physicists believe that in 10¹⁰⁰ years — a much larger number than it might seem in type — entropy will have caused all the heat in the universe to dissipate. Far away as that moment may be, experts do think it is coming.
Then there’s the availability of monkeys. Of the more than 250 possible species, Dr. Woodcock selected chimpanzees, our closest genomic kin, to mimic the Bard. He enlisted 200,000 — the entire population of chimps currently on Earth — until the end of time. (Optimistically, he did not to plan for the species’ dwindling or extinction. Nor did he consider constraints like the availability of paper or electricity; the study does not specify which platform the monkeys might use.)
Monkeys intent on recreating Shakespeare would also need editors, with a strict reinforcement training regimen that allowed for learning — and a lot of it, since Dr. Woodcock set each monkey’s life span at 30 years. “If it’s cumulative, obviously, you can get somewhere,” said Richard Dawkins, the evolutionary biologist, who discusses the typing monkeys in “The Blind Watchmaker,” his 1986 book about evolution. Unless the typing were “iterative,” though, Dr. Dawkins said in an interview, progress would be impossible.
The new paper has been mocked online because the authors purportedly fail to grapple with infinity. Even the paper’s title, “A numerical evaluation of the Finite Monkeys Theorem,” seems to be a mathematical bait-and-switch. Isn’t infinity a basic condition of the infinite monkey theorem?
It shouldn’t be, Dr. Woodcock seems to be saying. “The study we did was wholly a finite calculation on a finite problem,” he wrote in an email. “The main point made was just how constrained our universe’s resources are. Mathematicians can enjoy the luxury of infinity as a concept, but if we are to draw meaning from infinite-limit results, we need to know if they have any relevance in our finite universe.”
This conclusion circles back to the French mathematician Borel, who took an unlikely turn into politics, eventually fighting against the Nazis as part of the French Resistance. It was during the war that he introduced an elegant and intuitive law that now bears his name, and which states: “Events with a sufficiently small probability never occur.” That is where Dr. Woodcock lands, too. (Mathematicians who believe the infinite monkey theorem holds true cite two related, minor theorems known as the Borel-Cantelli lemmas, developed in the prewar years.)
The new paper offers a subtle comment on the seemingly unbridled optimism of some proponents of artificial intelligence. Dr. Woodcock and Mr. Falletta note, without truly elaborating, that the monkey problem could be “very pertinent” to today’s debates about artificial intelligence.
For starters, just as the typing monkeys will never write “Twelfth Night” without superhuman editors looking over their shoulders, so increasingly powerful artificial intelligences will require increasingly intensive human input and oversight. “If you live in the real world, you have to do real-world limitation,” said Mr. Anderson, who conducted the 2011 monkey experiment.
There is no free lunch, so to speak, said Eric Werner, a research scientist who runs the Oxford Advanced Research Foundation and has studied various forms of complexity. In a 1994 paper about ants, Dr. Werner laid out a guiding principle that, in his view, applies equally well to typing monkeys and today’s language-learning models: “Complex structures can only be generated by more complex structures.” Lacking constant curation, the result will be a procession of incoherent letters or what has come to be known as “A.I. slop.”
A monkey will never understand Hamlet’s angst or Falstaff’s bawdy humor. But the limits of A.I. cognition are less clear. “The big question in the industry is when or if A.I. will understand what it is writing,” Mr. Anderson said. “Once that happens, will A.I. be able to surpass Shakespeare in artistic merit and create something as unique as Shakespeare created?”
And when that day comes, “Do we become the monkeys to the A.I.?”
Culture
Anthony Richardson details back injury struggles: ‘I couldn’t even stand up’
Indianapolis Colts quarterback Anthony Richardson revealed Wednesday that he’s been dealing with a lower back issue that “might be chronic.”
The second-year pro was ruled out for last week’s game against the New York Giants due to back and foot injuries, though it’s his back that’s the main problem. Richardson recently underwent an MRI that he said revealed a “disc thing,” and his status for the Colts’ regular-season finale against the Jaguars remains in question.
Colts coach Shane Steichen initially said last week that Richardson was “really sore” before adding after the Giants loss that Richardson was dealing with back spasms. Richardson provided even more detail Wednesday, when he was an estimated “DNP” on the injury report on a day where the Colts didn’t officially practice but held a walkthrough.
“Last week was tough. I couldn’t even stand up on Tuesday, could barely even walk, crawling around the house,” Richardson said. “But I’m here. I’m standing now. If I can do everything in my power to get on the field, I’mma do so. That was my mindset last week as well, but I could barely move.”
Asked if he’s ever dealt with back spasms before, Richardson said “he’s been dealing with stuff like this since eighth grade, but it’s never been this severe.” Richardson said his back issues stem from a “disc thing” that he’s had for a while and it got “triggered” last week.
Richardson said he thought his back pain stemmed from frequently working out and running around, but now that he’s been made aware it’s a disc problem, he’s hopeful that he’ll be able to treat and manage it.
“It might be chronic, but there’s plenty of ways to prevent it (from) going on in the future,” Richardson said. “Now that I know what it is, I can find certain ways to stay out of certain positions and just make sure I’m healthy, 100 percent.”
Richardson added that he doesn’t believe he’ll need surgery.
“They say it’s not that severe,” Richardson said. “But God willing, I hope it never gets that severe or to that point. I just hope I can just keep playing throughout the rest of my career with no problems.”
Richardson is arguably the most athletic QB in NFL Scouting Combine history, which is a big reason the Colts selected him with the No. 4 pick in 2023 despite just 13 starts at Florida. However, Richardson has missed three games this season and 16 games through his first two NFL seasons due to shoulder, back and oblique injuries, as well as a concussion.
The 22-year-old was also benched for two games this season because he wasn’t focused enough during his preparation, according to Steichen. Richardson has gone 3-2 as the starter since returning to the starting lineup, and he’s 6-5 this season. He’s thrown eight touchdowns against 12 interceptions, and his 47.7 completion percentage ranks last in the NFL. Richardson has also scored six rushing touchdowns.
Richardson said he’s aware of the critics, many of whom have labeled him injury-prone, and that they have a right to their opinion since he’s missed a significant amount of games. He added that all he can do is work hard and try his best to be available in the future.
“Hopefully, next year — or this week coming up if I’m able to go – hopefully, I don’t miss any games and I can just stay healthy and just play,” Richardson said.
Required reading
(Photo: Luke Hales / Getty Images)
Culture
2025 Pro Bowl Games rosters: Jayden Daniels, Sam Darnold headline first-time participants
Washington Commanders quarterback Jayden Daniels, Minnesota Vikings quarterback Sam Darnold and Las Vegas Raiders tight end Brock Bowers headline the list of first timers for the 2025 Pro Bowl Games, which the league announced Thursday.
The Baltimore Ravens lead all teams with nine Pro Bowl selections, while the Detroit Lions (seven players), Minnesota Vikings (six), Philadelphia Eagles (six), Dallas Cowboys (five) and Kansas City Chiefs (five) each placing at least five players on the roster.
The four teams without anyone making the Pro Bowl’s initial roster are the New York Jets, Miami Dolphins, New Orleans Saints and Tennessee Titans.
While he hasn’t participated in the Pro Bowl since 2021, as the Chiefs have won the last two Super Bowls, Kansas City quarterback Patrick Mahomes wasn’t selected for the first time in his seven years as a starter.
This year’s Pro Bowl Games will be held in Orlando, Fla., with the skills challenges occurring over two days at separate locations. The first part of the skills competition will happen in the Nicholson Fieldhouse on UCF’s campus on Jan. 30 and air at 7 p.m. ET on ESPN. The second part of the event, including the flag football game, will be at Camping World Stadium on Feb. 2. It will air on ESPN and ABC at 3 p.m. ET.
The NFL added a trivia element to this year’s skills competitions, which include traditional games of dodgeball and tug-of-war. “Passing the test” will have each quarterback answer five trivia questions about other Pro Bowlers from the 2024 season. Correct answers will give passers more time to attempt to hit targets.
Peyton and Eli Manning will coach the AFC and NFC teams again. The NFC defeated the AFC for the second straight year of the Pro Bowl Games in 2024.
Here’s a look at each conference’s initial rosters:
AFC
Offense
*Starter
Quarterback
- Josh Allen, Buffalo Bills*
- Joe Burrow, Cincinnati Bengals
- Lamar Jackson, Baltimore Ravens
Running back
- Derrick Henry, Baltimore Ravens*
- Joe Mixon, Houston Texans
- Jonathan Taylor, Indianapolis Colts
Fullback
- Patrick Ricard, Baltimore Ravens*
Wide receiver
- Ja’Marr Chase, Cincinnati Bengals*
- Jerry Jeudy, Cleveland Browns*
- Nico Collins, Houston Texans
- Zay Flowers, Baltimore Ravens
Tight end
- Brock Bowers, Las Vegas Raiders*
- Travis Kelce, Kansas City Chiefs
Offensive tackle
- Dion Dawkins, Buffalo Bills*
- Laremy Tunsil, Houston Texans*
- Rashawn Slater, Los Angeles Chargers
Offensive guard
- Quenton Nelson, Indianapolis Colts*
- Joe Thuney, Kansas City Chiefs*
- Trey Smith, Kansas City Chiefs
Center
- Creed Humphrey, Kansas City Chiefs*
- Tyler Linderbaum, Baltimore Ravens
Defense
Defensive end
- Myles Garrett, Cleveland Browns*
- Trey Hendrickson, Cincinnati Bengals*
- Maxx Crosby, Las Vegas Raiders
Interior linemen
- Cameron Heyward, Pittsburgh Steelers*
- Chris Jones, Kansas City Chiefs*
- Nnamdi Madubuike, Baltimore Ravens
Outside linebacker
- Nik Bonitto, Denver Broncos*
- T.J. Watt, Pittsburgh Steelers*
- Khalil Mack, Los Angeles Chargers
Inside/middle linebacker
- Roquan Smith, Baltimore Ravens*
- Zaire Franklin, Indianapolis Colts
Cornerback
- Derek Stingley Jr., Houston Texans*
- Patrick Surtain II, Denver Broncos*
- Marlon Humphrey, Baltimore Ravens
- Denzel Ward, Cleveland Browns
Free safety
- Minkah Fitzpatrick, Pittsburgh Steelers*
Strong safety
- Kyle Hamilton, Baltimore Ravens*
- Derwin James, Los Angeles Chargers
Special teams
Long snapper
- Ross Matiscik, Jacksonville Jaguars*
Punter
- Logan Cooke, Jacksonville Jaguars*
Kicker
- Chris Boswell, Pittsburgh Steelers*
Return specialist
- Marvin Mims Jr., Denver Broncos*
Special teamer
- Brenden Schooler, New England Patriots*
NFC
Offense
Quarterback
- Jared Goff, Detroit Lions*
- Jayden Daniels, Washington Commanders
- Sam Darnold, Minnesota Vikings
Running back
- Saquon Barkley, Philadelphia Eagles*
- Jahmyr Gibbs, Detroit Lions
- Josh Jacobs, Green Bay Packers
Fullback
- Kyle Juszczyk, San Francisco 49ers
Wide receiver
- Justin Jefferson, Minnesota Vikings*
- Amon-Ra St. Brown, Detroit Lions*
- CeeDee Lamb, Dallas Cowboys
- Terry McLaurin, Washington Commanders
Tight end
- George Kittle, San Francisco 49ers*
- Trey McBride, Arizona Cardinals
Offensive tackle
- Lane Johnson, Philadelphia Eagles*
- Penei Sewell, Detroit Lions*
- Tristan Wirfs, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Offensive guard
- Landon Dickerson, Philadelphia Eagles*
- Tyler Smith, Dallas Cowboys*
- Chris Lindstrom, Atlanta Falcons
Center
- Frank Ragnow, Detroit Lions*
- Cam Jurgens, Philadelphia Eagles
Defense
Defensive end
- Nick Bosa, San Francisco 49ers*
- Micah Parsons, Dallas Cowboys*
- Rashan Gary, Green Bay Packers
Interior linemen
- Jalen Carter, Philadelphia Eagles*
- Dexter Lawrence, New York Giants*
- Vita Vea, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Outside linebacker
- Jonathan Greenard, Minnesota Vikings*
- Andrew Van Ginkel, Minnesota Vikings*
- Jared Verse, Los Angeles Rams
Inside/middle linebacker
- Fred Warner, San Francisco 49ers*
- Zack Baun, Philadelphia Eagles
Cornerback
- Jaylon Johnson, Chicago Bears*
- Byron Murphy, Minnesota Vikings*
- Jaycee Horn, Carolina Panthers
- Devon Witherspoon, Seattle Seahawks
Free safety
- Xavier McKinney, Green Bay Packers*
Strong safety
- Budda Baker, Arizona Cardinals*
- Brian Branch, Detroit Lions
Special teams
Long snapper
- Andrew DePaola, Minnesota Vikings*
Punter
Kicker
- Brandon Aubrey, Dallas Cowboys*
Return specialist
- KaVontae Turpin, Dallas Cowboys*
Special teamer
- KhaDarel Hodge, Atlanta Falcons*
Required reading
(Photo of Jayden Daniels: Lee Coleman / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
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