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May 9, 2025 6 mins

This is the world of roller derby: physical, proud, and welcoming. 

North Island Roller Derby, or NIRD (pronounced ‘nerd’), is an open gender league in the Comox Valley with around 15 skaters. The organization is running a raffle, fundraising to help cover expenses, expand the league, and engage the community.

The sport itself is a game of skating in a wide circle track, checking and blocking to allow your team to score points, or to stop the other team from scoring their own. Lindsey Ryzak, better known for her derby name “Lita Riot” is a skater and member-at-large on the NIRD board of directors. She says the game is fast paced with a lot of strategy, and “really fun.”

Lita Riot first started playing more than ten years ago, living in Vancouver, when the hit movie “Whiplash” popularized the sport.

She said, “I answered an ad on Craigslist and then I ended up moving to the island and I skated in Campbell River for a while. Now, here I am!”

Lita Riot said that for her it’s the quick thinking involved in the sport that has kept her coming back for over a decade. She has said the game can be confusing at first, but once you’re hooked, you’re hooked for life.

Riot said that the sport took a hit on the island during the pandemic, but Comox Valley’s local league started much more recently.

“North Island Roller Derby has been going on for about just over a year. There used to be a lot more teams on the island. A lot of them didn't quite make it through Covid, which is really sad. But there are still ones that are trying to regrow and there are some that are still going strong, like in Victoria. Our team has been doing so well and we've really grown the last year, and so many new skaters and so many people are coming through our Learn to Skate program; that has been really awesome to see,” she said.

Riot said the league has enough skaters currently to make up one team, whereas bigger leagues like the one in Victoria have multiple house teams under their banner. 

The North Island league is a non-profit, sometimes donating their proceeds to other local charities, but in order to grow larger they need some support of their own.

“Right now we travel usually to Victoria, or we'll travel to Vancouver. There are games and tournaments in places like Armstrong, Chilliwack, there's some going on right now in Alberta, but the ones we'd really like to go to are a little bit farther on the mainland and always those ones, you know, the costs start adding up, like ferry, driving down to the ferry, all those kinds of things. So sometimes we do have to go quite far to be able to play, but it's worth it in the end. I find it's always so much fun just to go on road trips with each other,” she reminisced.

To help meet some of these costs, and continue to grow the league with more home and away games, and by drawing more community into the sport, NIRD is running a raffle.

The prize is one thousand dollars cash, which Riot joked is nothing to laugh at right now.

“It's a really great prize and the odds are– I believe it's one in 300, which is pretty good. Tickets are $20 and you can sign up or buy tickets for those online. You can find one of us and give us cash, but it's probably easier just to do it online,” she said.

The draw will take place at a practice on May 21st, then be posted to social media. Riot said that one goal of the raffle is to reach more of the community that isn’t connected to the sport yet, and strengthen that connection.

There are more ways to get involved with the league as well, from supporting the team at local games, to even lacing up and joining in.

“We have our learn to skate program, it's the intro to roller derby or 'IRD’; like we have ‘nerd’ and we have our ‘-erd’ skaters, and that is through the Cumberland Rec Centre. You can sign up through the Cumberland Rec– it's at the ‘Cumberland Recreational Institute’ I think it's called, the Rec Centre in Cumberland. And you can sign up through their website; whenever they put out their activity calendar, it's right through there,” she said.

Riot said that some equipment is available to rent, and the league will support new starters in finding the gear that is right for them.

“Mostly we're just teaching you how to skate safely. So stopping, starting, how to fall down without hurting yourself, just skills you need to be safe roller skating in general, because sometimes that can be a real big deterrent. People are afraid, because they haven't been skating [recently] or they've never been skating before. So we're not doing anything like– we're not bashing into each other in these Learn to Skate programs,” she said.

The course is to help new skaters become comfortable

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