BeaverTails taking down Rideau Canal kiosks - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 02:54 AM | Calgary | 6.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

BeaverTails taking down Rideau Canal kiosks

Winterlude ended this year without seeing its star attraction the Rideau Canal Skateway open.One of the popular vendors on its ice is taking down three of its four stands.

1st time the skateway did not open for Winterlude, Ottawa Tourism says

A partly frozen waterway with stairs and shacks on it.
A BeaverTails kiosk stands on a closed section of the Rideau Canal Skateway in downtown Ottawa last month. (Christian Patry/Radio-Canada)

The capital's Winterlude festival ended this year with plenty of swings in the weather and without seeing its star attraction the Rideau Canal Skateway open.

Some canal events like the dragon boat racewere cancelled, while others were adapted or moved to refrigerated rinks.

The co-founder of BeaverTails Inc., was more than disappointed.

"Business on the Rideau Canal Skateway has been godawful,"said Grant Hooker."There is no business. Zero."

A man in a scarf poses next to a food stand.
Hooker, seen here in 2016, says unseasonably warm temperatures have been bad for business this winter. (CBC)

Hooker said the company is setto take down three of the four kiosks on the canal at the National Arts Centre, Dows Lake and Concord Street after they had already stood empty for months.

It's leaving one by Fifth Avenue, just in case.

'A losing proposition'

According to Hooker, it cost about $50,000 to install the four kiosks, prepare equipment and hire and train staff in time for the season.

Now, he said he faces an additional cost of $10,000 to $15,000 to take three of those kiosks down.

"That's just a total loss. And then there's all those lost sales that would have come our way had the skateway opened," he said.

"You don't have to be an accountant to say it's a losing proposition from the canal this year."

Hooker added that other BeaverTailkiosks have made more money than usual thanks, in part, to other Winterludefestivities,but those returns are a fraction of the income the company would normally seeon the ice.

Still, the company is depending on that revenueto "keep us alive, keep us ready to come back next year,"he said.

This year comes after pandemic restrictions that closed kiosksin 2021 and 2022.

Extreme cold to record warmth

Winterludealso hadits ice carving competition delayed because of extreme cold during its first weekend, only to have the sculpturesmeltin record warm weather days later.

There were plenty of alternative land-based activities for people to participate inaccording to a spokesperson for Canadian Heritage, which organizes Winterlude.

"It's really been a great, big party on Sparks street for the last three weekends," said MelanieBrault.

Still, she said, "Wecannot deny that the Rideau Canal Skatewayis an iconic piece of Winterlude."

People walk on a city pedestrian street in winter next to a ice sculpture of a large fish.
Dozens of people gathered on Sparks Street to participate in Winterlude's first in-person festivities since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. (Avanthika Anand/CBC)

The annual winter festival wrapped up on Family Day with skating at Rideau Hall, Lansdowne Parkand City Hall as well as a final free concert at the Rainbow Bistro in the ByWard Market.

Ottawa Tourism says it saw stronger hotel bookings in this year's second weekend than it did the last time the festival was in-person in 2020,but admitted it was disappointing to see the "huge draw" of the canal not open for the first time in the festival's history.

Skateway 'missed' at festival

Anuj Bhargava, who was at City Hall'sRink of Dreamswith his family on Monday, said he was looking forward to getting a BeaverTailthere.

Still, he said,his daughter missed being able to get out onto the canal this year.

"It's a little sad," he said.

An outdoor skating rink next to a city hall and courthouse. Some skaters have a motion blur.
People ice skate on the Rink of Dreams at City Hall in Ottawa in December 2021. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

Patrick Kavanaugh said he recently moved to Ottawaand had been looking forward to skating on the canal for months.

"I really boasted about it before we moved here," he said. "I was like, 'We got the canal, the longest skating rink in the world,' and we really haven't been able to do that so it's a little disappointing."

"I really hope this is an anomaly," he said.

The Rideau Canal Skatewayremains closed for the time being.

Last week, the NCC said it would provide an update mid-week this week.

Add some good to your morning and evening.

The bright spot in your inbox. Stay connected to the city you love with The Highlight, delivered monthly.

...

The next issue of The Highlight will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.