Times Colonist

End of the road for Zamboni owner’s effort to clear snow

- KATIE DeROSA kderosa@timescolon­ist.com

In an act of kindness that’s being described as quintessen­tially Canadian, Central Saanich farmer Marko Kardum said he and a friend took a Zamboni on a steep cul-de-sac Monday night to help clear snow so that his aunt could get out of her driveway.

The 32-year-old’s oh-so-Canadian response to Greater Victoria’s snow woes has become a viral hit on social media, with news coverage across the country.

Kardum said he bought the Zamboni for $300 in an online auction with the idea of using it for day-today duties on the farm, such as spreading manure. “It was $300, how could I not buy it?” On Monday night when the snow was piling up, he decided to test out its snow-clearing abilities on Tanner Ridge Place.

“We had that heavy snow [Monday] night, so we wanted to see if the Zamboni would do a better job. So we took it out and we got it up to my aunt’s house and back — and that’s when we got pulled over,” he said.

It seems his well-meaning deed resulted in a call to the police, and soon a Central Saanich officer was on scene. This being Central Saanich, Kardum knew the officer.

“He said: ‘Hello, Mr. Kardum.’ And I said: ‘Hi, Sgt. Brailey.’ ”

Sgt. Paul Brailey told Kardum there’s no insurance on the Zamboni, so if there were an accident, he’d be liable.

Brailey told the Times Colonist that while the Zamboni successful­ly cleared the top layer of snow, it flattened the bottom layer, which could harden into ice if the temperatur­e dropped.

The officer escorted Kardum down Tanner Ridge Place and back to his farm on Central Saanich Road. Kardum did not get a ticket.

He usually clears his aunt’s driveway with an oldfashion­ed snowblower, but he said the Zamboni was “working like a champ.”

Kardum said he didn’t expect his Zamboni adventure to attract this much attention. “It wasn’t anything planned,” he said.

Kardum, a Tim Hortons coffee in hand, said that from now on, he’ll limit the Zamboni to the confines of his farm.

 ??  ?? Marko Kardum leans on the Zamboni he and a friend tried out as a snowplow Monday night on a steep cul-de-sac on Tanner Ridge Place in Central Saanich.
Marko Kardum leans on the Zamboni he and a friend tried out as a snowplow Monday night on a steep cul-de-sac on Tanner Ridge Place in Central Saanich.

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