Curling on ice is much more popular here than floor curling, but I don't stand up in skates so its not for me.
I'm going to take the risk that you may not have been jesting here, Diane, and dare to point out that curlers don't actually wear ice skates.
I do speak from a modicum of experience from my school days, when we were allowed to try out the sport at the local ice rink in Perth for a few weeks. You wear purpose made shoes (or at least a slip on cover for one of your own trainers) on the ice. One sole is slippy, and the other (with the cover) is not and grips the ice. If memory serves, the slippy sole is the one on the opposite foot to your dominant hand which releases the stone. If I'm wrong, then that would explain why I didn't last very long at this sport. The contrasting soles have the effect of each player seemingly mimicking the riding of a child's scooter (sans scooter) as they propel themselves from one end of the rink to the other, with their dominant foot 'pedalling' to one side as the other foot glides.
Ironically, I'd possibly have been more successful had I worn my ice hockey skates back then, as I was infinitely more steady on the ice wearing them than the curling regulation footwear. The floor curling looks like fun, but for me the best bit about the ice version was the slide when it was your turn to launch a stone, as you tried to keep your balance with a broom in your other arm whilst attempting to look graceful as you slide forward, crouched low, with your legs positioned as near to the splits as anyone (particularly males) would ever feel comfortable with outside of a gymnasium or circus tent, and your trailing foot twisted on the ice at an ankle-breaking angle. Having no ice would really take all the fun out of that.
It wasn't until many years after my dabble in the sport that I discovered the reason they call it 'The Roaring Game' is because of the noise the stones make as they travel across the ice, particularly at bigger events when there are a lot of stones taking part at the same time. I just used to shout a lot.