When Dylan and his brothers were a little older and shooting harder, Mike figured the narrow, 16-foot-wide rink beside the house should be moved to the backyard so it could be a little bigger with homemade boards added.
"The kids get so much enjoyment with it," he said. "We have neighborhood rinks but here, they can just throw their skates on, go outside and skate and come right back inside. It made it so much more accessible for them. I just felt like it was the right thing to do. Dylan was relentless once he got on it. He just wanted to be on it as much as he could, and it just never was something I envisioned not doing once I started. I just wanted to keep doing it."
Just like when he was a kid in Rexdale and Burlington, Ontario, and Beloeil, Quebec, when his dad made rinks at home.
"Now I live in a perfect place to do it," Mike said.
The added bonus: The skates and minigames on the home ice in Whitehorse are sometimes under the northern lights.
"It can be quite beautiful at night," he said. "When they do come, they look like they're right outside the back door. It can be pretty good that way."
Dylan, who has scored 30 points (12 goals, 18 assists) in 56 games for the Sabres this season, said the Heritage Classic will be his first competitive game on outdoor ice. For an outdoor-game newbie, having grown up in Canada's north, and with access to his own ice most years from November to April, he's as prepared as anyone could be.
"I'm just super excited," Dylan said. "I'm just going to take in the whole experience. I'm pretty lucky to get to play in an outdoor game this early in my career. Just super excited for it, excited to see how the ice feels and how it feels to play outside. I'm hoping I can use my younger days of practicing on an outdoor rink to my best advantage."