
Have you had a chance to blade the USA yet? If so can you compare to Ireland and the scene in Ireland?
Yes, I was over in California years ago skating. There’s not too much in common between both scences. In Cali you have good weather, more shops, skate companies, skating distributors; there is more structure. Though I find here in Ireland it’s a tighter knit community.

When we started discussing this I accidentally said UK in an email to you when referencing, well, Ireland as part of the greater United Kingdom. You were not happy. Talk about the history of Irish rolling and why that reference is so grating.
Ireland became a Republic and left the British Commonwealth in 1949. A lot of people think Ireland is still part of the UK, it’s a common mistake. The Irish rolling scene started in the early ’90s. The first shops started selling skates in 1994. I remember going to a small skating competition, The Street Ball Challange, in St. Annes Park in 1995. My parents ran two small parks from 1997–2000, one in Clontarf and one in Larkhill. These times were the best here, a lot of rollers from all over Ireland came together and got to know each other. A shop called Primetime in Cork starting running the annual St. Patrick’s weekend comps. In 2001 we got our first indoor parks, Rampcity and Ramp n Rail. This was the same year as the first big street comp in Cork. Rolling has died down over and then flourished over the years. I’ve seen some great rollers quit and seen many new faces start. I guess it’s the same everywhere
You set out to make Kaltik with some very specific goals in mind. How do you think you guys are doing in that regard?
I believe the rollerblading community is only truly supported from within itself. I established Kaltik as a grassroots project, simply set out as a genuine skater owned and run company, to support rollerblading in Ireland and abroad. We sponsor and support skaters on our team from Ireland, Hungary, Scotland, USA, England, and the Czech Republic. We organize rollerblading events here in Ireland (namely the infamous St. Patrick’s Weekend Competition), street comps, Indoor Skate Jams, etc….

What have you learned during your run with the company?
Some things I would have never come across if I had never started Kaltik, the biggest being an understanding on how the “rolling industry” works and how only a small number of people who own distribution companies and retail shops have such big takes in “our” industry. It’s also opened my eyes to so many companies taking from the sport and not giving anything back into it.
Is there a fundamental flaw in frames or how most companies make them?
I won’t say there is any kind of fundamental flaw with any of the frames on the market. I’m not personally keen on how some companies put the same product on the market for 5 years or more and don’t make any adjustments or improvements with it.
How do you manage juggling your responsibility as a company owner with your needs as a skater?
Yeah, I have more stuff going on right now than ever before. The biggest responsibility was given to me when my son Callum was born on the 3/25/2010. Besides fatherhood, I’ve been so busy the past 8-9 months since I started to develop the new frame, I haven’t been able to get out as much to skate. I’m busier now than ever between being a father, the progress of Kaltik, skating, filming and looking after the production of our new team DVD. In January I also started to run an inline shop here in Dublin.
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