Island life

By the time Montgomery and de Haas arrived in Ireland, they were already well-practised at embracing uncertainty.

He had recently retired from professional hockey, having spent his career playing at the professional level in North America and Europe, and briefly considered joining the Calgary Fire Department, following a family path rooted in public service.

His brother, Bo, was a firefighter, and their father, Rod, is the fire chief in Saskatchewan. The appeal of stability was real but fleeting, and curiosity, as it so often had in his life, won out.

They were living on a small island in Malaysia when de Haas came across a posting for seasonal caretakers on Great Blasket Island. She hesitated at first, unsure how competitive the process might be, but the idea lingered. When she saw the listing again, she sent it to Montgomery. At the time, they were preparing to head to another island in Indonesia for volunteer work.

The application process dragged on for months, complicated by pandemic delays. Eventually, Great Blasket Island property managers Billy O’Connor and Alice Hayes agreed to give the young, adventurous couple a chance.

“They’re a lovely couple,” O’Connor told The Athletic in 2022. “So we said we’d give them a go.”

When they finally arrived on the island, they were, as Montgomery put it, thrown into the “deep end” straight away.

“What was really eye opening was they dropped us off that first week and there was a huge storm coming,” Montgomery recalled. “Nobody was allowed to come to the island or leave the island if you wanted. The only way out was maybe a helicopter. It was like, hey, you’re here now. This is where you’re going to live for the next six months.”

Almost straight away, Montgomery noticed what he described as the island’s “special energy” and, more than anything, the absence of noise he had never experienced before.

“Another thing that sticks out is just the stillness and the quietness of it all,” he said. The couple had just come from Indonesia, where they had completed their yoga teaching course, a rewarding albeit noisy chapter.

Montgomery asked Olympics.com to pause and listen to our own surroundings. Perhaps there is a car passing by, or the hum of a fridge. On the island, there was none of that. “We got to go over to this island and just be in this quietness. All you hear are the birds and the seals and the wind,” he said. “It was pretty special.”

For someone who had spent years surrounded by air horns and roaring ice hockey crowds, the contrast was striking. Yet the silence on Great Blasket Island felt familiar rather than foreign.

Even during his playing career, Montgomery resisted letting hockey become his entire identity, gravitating instead toward meditation, visualisation, and practices that were far from mainstream in the sport at the time.

“I never really wanted my identity to always be about being a hockey player. I always knew there was life outside of hockey,” he said. 

Life on the island quickly settled into an entirely new rhythm. Their days were spent cleaning and maintaining cottages, welcoming overnight guests, running a small coffee stand, and keeping fires lit against the Atlantic winds. Between visitors, it was often just Montgomery, de Haas, their dog Lenny, and, of course, the seals.

“It was a big adjustment, I suppose, going from being a hockey player to living lonely on an island, definitely,” he said. “But I’ve always tried to find that quietness away from the game as well. I’ve always loved nature and just going out, even just by myself, for a walk out in nature.”