The Telegram (St. John's)

Young man’s wish to skate comes true

Parents overwhelme­d by company’s effort to make special skate supports for their adult son

- BY GLEN WHIFFEN

Ryan Quilty greets you with a heart-warming grin and a shy lowering of his head, and gently grasps your hand when you reach out to him.

At age 20, Ryan is happy and full of life, despite his many challenges.

He was diagnosed at the age of six months with tuberous sclerosis — an uncommon genetic disorder that causes benign tumours that can develop in many parts of the body. For Ryan, that has meant multiple tumours in his brain, kidneys, eyes and skin that have caused him health problems over the years and countless trips to the Janeway Children’s Hospital in St. John’s from the west coast home where he grew up.

He also suffers from epilepsy, autism and developmen­tal delay.

All of these challenges, however, have not stopped him from enjoying many activities with his parents, Jeff Quilty and Tracy Chafe-quilty, and his older sister, Jenna. They took him hiking, snowshoein­g, snowmobili­ng and kayaking when they lived in Rocky Harbour.

The family moved to St. John’s last fall.

Now, through Easter Seals, Ryan is involved in a number of other inclusive activities such as wall climbing, bocci, music and swimming. And he’ll soon be in the saddle with the Rainbow Riders therapy program.

One thing Ryan has always wanted to do that he physically could not, however, was skate. Balance issues prevent Ryan from skating.

But he loves hockey. Ryan gets excited when he watches it with his dad.

He says with a laugh that he is a “San Jose” (Sharks) fan, though his father is trying to convert him to the Toronto Maple Leafs.

Throughout his school years, whenever his class went to the arena for skating, Ryan had to sit on the sidelines and watch.

His parents have searched for years for adaptive skates for Ryan, without success, but he has never given up his dream of being able to skate.

“We were walking through (a sports store) one day and he said, ‘I wish I could play hockey,’” Tracy said. “And we thought we should probably search again for some kind of way that we can get him on a pair of skates. But nothing past the bob-skates for a toddler exist. There’s nothing for adults.”

On Jan. 9, after seeing informatio­n about a new business — Atlantic Pro Sports in Paradise — being shared on Facebook, Tracy decided to give them a try.

“I thought I would contact them to see if there was anything they knew of that existed on the market that would permit Ryan to be stable enough on skates to enjoy skating,” Tracy said.

The owners of Atlantic Pro Sports, Colin Anthony and Craig Thistle, began a search for such a product. Thistle was in Toronto at the time doing a course and searched locations in that city.

They concluded there was nothing on the market that they could order in for Ryan.

“Just saying, ‘No, sorry, we couldn’t find anything,’ wasn’t good enough for these guys,” Tracy said. “They asked us to come in to discuss an idea. They told us they were going to fabricate a pair of skate supports for Ryan.”

Anthony and Thistle are members of, and trained through, the Maximum Edge skate sharpening and maintenanc­e system. They opened Atlantic Pro Sports in Paradise last November.

Anthony said their friend, Donnie Gosse, works at the Pennecon Energy Services Group (fabricatio­n, welding) facility in Chapel Arm, and they asked for his help.

“We sat down one night and drew it up on paper,” Anthony said. “Donnie went back and through trial and error came up with it. He dropped off the product and, with some fit and finish work here, we managed to get the supports attached to the skates.”

Anthony’s 14-year-old son, Nick, even got in on the action. Nick plays bantam hockey and donated a pair of his old skates and a helmet to Ryan.

“That was Nick’s skates and helmet that he didn’t use anymore,” Anthony said. “He was happy to give them to Ryan.”

The supports are made from aluminum, which was precisely angled, cut and welded, then trimmed and filed. Copper rivets were used for extra strength to secure the supports to the skates.

Tracy said her family couldn’t believe the effort that Anthony, Thistle and Gosse went through for Ryan.

“These people were strangers. They didn’t know Ryan’s story, and we are blown away by the care and kindness that they have shown to Ryan,” Tracy said. “They were in a position to make a difference and they did. We need more people and more businesses like this in our world.

“Ryan was so happy, and he was so proud when myself and his sister Jenna took him down to The Loop (at Bannerman Park). You should have seen how proud and excited he was to take part in an activity that he normally had to sit coldly on the sidelines and watch everyone else enjoy.”

Anthony and Thistle are engineers with full-time jobs who are trying to expand their pro sports business. Helping Ryan has been something they say has had a huge impact on them, as well.

And since the word got out, they already have two more requests for specialize­d skate supports.

“We started this business based on positivity and we are trying to keep positive energy in anything and everything we do,” Anthony said. “What we did for those people … we didn’t have any idea the impact it would have on them. We didn’t know Ryan, but through this we learned his story.”

Thistle said he was still in Toronto when Ryan tried out his skates, and he saw pictures and video of him at The Loop on Facebook. He said he began sharing the story with everyone around him.

“To see through social media the impact, and I did talk to Tracy through social media, to hear how happy Ryan was and their whole family, it was amazing,” he said. “I was showing everyone. It was pretty cool.”

Gosse said workers at the Pennecon facility in Chapel Arm are pretty proud, too.

“We put a picture of Ryan up in our shop because everybody in our shop had a little part in it,” he said. “And we watched the video on Facebook. Just to see him get on that ice, that was enough for us.”

Tracy said some of Ryan’s favourite places to go in St. John’s are the parks. Whenever they take him to Bowring Park, he wants to see the Peter Pan statue, the Fighting Newfoundla­nder and the Caribou that represents the Royal Newfoundla­nd Regiment.

Downtown, he likes to visit the National War Memorial and the Terry Fox Statue, and loves to hear the story of Terry Fox.

And thanks to the ingenuity and determinat­ion of Anthony, Thistle and Gosse, Ryan now can enjoy skating at Bannerman Park.

“It may have been 20 years through this storm of tuberous sclerosis, but he is no doubt the sunshine of our lives,” Tracy said.

“He is not only alive, he is living. He has something to look forward to every day and his smile just gets brighter and brighter.”

 ?? GLEN WHIFFEN/THE TELEGRAM ?? Jeff Quilty helps his son, Ryan, 20, try on a pair of skates at Atlantic Pro Sports in Paradise Monday.
GLEN WHIFFEN/THE TELEGRAM Jeff Quilty helps his son, Ryan, 20, try on a pair of skates at Atlantic Pro Sports in Paradise Monday.
 ?? GLEN WHIFFEN/THE TELEGRAM ?? Ryan Quilty, 20, is all smiles as he checks out his skates with special supports attached at Atlantic Pro Sports in Paradise on Monday.
GLEN WHIFFEN/THE TELEGRAM Ryan Quilty, 20, is all smiles as he checks out his skates with special supports attached at Atlantic Pro Sports in Paradise on Monday.
 ?? GLEN WHIFFEN/THE TELEGRAM ?? With no skate supports available for adults, Atlantic Pro Sports owners Colin Anthony and Craig Thistle, with the help of Donnie Gosse of the Pennecon Energy Services Group (fabricatio­n, welding) facility in Chapel Arm, came up with the idea to...
GLEN WHIFFEN/THE TELEGRAM With no skate supports available for adults, Atlantic Pro Sports owners Colin Anthony and Craig Thistle, with the help of Donnie Gosse of the Pennecon Energy Services Group (fabricatio­n, welding) facility in Chapel Arm, came up with the idea to...
 ?? GLEN WHIFFEN/THE TELEGRAM ?? Tracy Chafe-quilty and Jeff Quilty kneel next to their son, Ryan, who can now learn to skate thanks to the efforts of Atlantic Pro Sports owners Craig Thistle (standing, left) and Colin Anthony, who along with friend Donnie Gosse fabricated special...
GLEN WHIFFEN/THE TELEGRAM Tracy Chafe-quilty and Jeff Quilty kneel next to their son, Ryan, who can now learn to skate thanks to the efforts of Atlantic Pro Sports owners Craig Thistle (standing, left) and Colin Anthony, who along with friend Donnie Gosse fabricated special...

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