Close X
Tuesday, December 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Air In A Bottle? How Companies Sell Canadian Nature

The Canadian Press, 08 Apr, 2018 11:57 AM
    When two Edmonton men started bottling and selling air from Banff and Lake Louise, Alta., some people thought it was a farce, but about four years later the duo's expanded their line to also include products with the country's glacier and spring waters as main ingredients.
     
     
    Troy Paquette and Moses Lam co-founded Vitality Air after reading articles online about air pollution and chatting about how anyone who visits Banff raves about the air quality.
     
     
    "We just kind of spun it from there and thought: 'Wouldn't it be cool if we could find a way to share that with the rest of the world?'" said Paquette.
     
     
    "And that's kind of where it all started from."
     
     
    Vitality Air's founders and other creative Canadian entrepreneurs are packaging Canada's natural resources to fill a demand for wellness products with a fresh twist.
     
     
    Some resourceful Canadians have tapped into the trees, bringing maple and birch water to store shelves, while a raw water fad in the U.S. could soon ripple over to the border. All these entrepreneurs tout their product's natural qualities and possible health-promoting components.
     
     
    These companies follow a broader wellness trend, said Amy Chung, Canadian beauty industry analyst for market-research firm NPD Group.
     
     
    Nowadays, people want more openness and details on products and to know, for example, what they're putting on their face, she said.
     
     
    Much of the demand for Vitality Air comes from China where air pollution is a major problem.
     
     
    The company's website plays up health angles, claiming "fresh air plays a vital role in the physical and emotional wellness of people of all ages," and that breathing in its products "is like giving your mind and body a shot of nature."
     
     
    More recently, the company added a line of facial mists to its website, which it calls "a natural progression" from the air canisters. The so-called glacier myst includes "the untouched waters of the Rocky Mountain glaciers," according to the site, while the "sulphur myst" is enhanced with sulphur from springs in Banff. One bottle costs $20.
     
     
    The mist offers the body and mind tranquility, and keeps people looking healthy and energized, according to the site.
     
     
    Other entrepreneurs have taken a similar approach, selling a well-known Canadian ingredient as a wellness product to the masses.
     
     
    Lower Valley Beverage Company in Flesherton, Ont., produces Sapsucker, a maple tree water harvested from mature maple trees that it calls "a naturally pure alternative to bottled water." The beverage has 46 naturally occurring minerals, antioxidants and vitamins, according to the website.
     
     
    Nine restaurants in Ontario serve the drink, and it can also be purchased at several independent grocers, as well as some larger chains like Whole Foods Market and Farm Boy.
     
     
    Burnaby, B.C.-based 52 North produces something similar: birch water.
     
     
    The beverage has been consumed for centuries in Northern Europe, according to the company's website, "as a health drink with detoxifying and revitalizing properties."
     
     
    The trend is a continuation of a food industry craze that started several years ago when lifestyle changes like the Paleo diet, said to mimic our ancestors' ways of eating, came into vogue. 
     
     
    It's "going back to the basics where things were still just as effective and we didn't have all of these extra ingredients and chemicals," Chung said.
     
     
    While it may seem strange to pay a price for a seemingly simple product, wellness is considered a luxury now, she said.
     
     
    Some of it also has to do with convenience, Chung noted, as not everyone has time to become an extreme do-it-yourself type of person, who concocts things like natural laundry detergent at home. Busy people may be more willing to pay for these kinds of products, she said.
     
     
    While the canned air may be seeing more demand in areas where air pollution is a concern, Chung thinks Canadians may one day embrace these products too. She points to how sunscreen makers are now touting anti-pollution sunscreen, which protects from the sun and other environmental factors, in Canada too, she said.
     
     
    "A lot of trends kind of make it over here too."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Not Known What Caused Humboldt Broncos Saskatchewan Bus Crash That Killed 15: RCMP

    Not Known What Caused Humboldt Broncos Saskatchewan Bus Crash That Killed 15: RCMP
    The victims were dispatched by helicopter and ambulance to care centres in nearby Saskatoon.

    Not Known What Caused Humboldt Broncos Saskatchewan Bus Crash That Killed 15: RCMP

    'HORRIFIC, HORRIFIC ACCIDENT': Hockey World In Shock After HUMBOLDT BRONCOS Bus Crash

    'HORRIFIC, HORRIFIC ACCIDENT': Hockey World In Shock After HUMBOLDT BRONCOS Bus Crash
    A horrific bus crash involving a Saskatchewan junior hockey team, the Humboldt Broncos, killed 15 people Friday, including its head coach and captain, with another 14 sent to hospital.

    'HORRIFIC, HORRIFIC ACCIDENT': Hockey World In Shock After HUMBOLDT BRONCOS Bus Crash

    Fraser Institute Study Lists Bad Decisions, Failure To Act, As ICBC Debt Mounted

    Fraser Institute Study Lists Bad Decisions, Failure To Act, As ICBC Debt Mounted
    VANCOUVER — A study from a Vancouver-based public policy think tank blames what it terms "misguided decisions" and runaway costs for the current financial crisis at the Insurance Corporation of British Columbia.

    Fraser Institute Study Lists Bad Decisions, Failure To Act, As ICBC Debt Mounted

    Passengers Offered Cruise Benefits After Journey Marred By Construction

    VICTORIA — An offer of a free cruise isn't enough to quell one passenger's anger over a Panama Canal vacation that she says was marred by construction noise and fumes.

    Passengers Offered Cruise Benefits After Journey Marred By Construction

    Tory Leader Andrew Scheer Insists Committee Get Briefed On India Trip Before He Does

    Tory Leader Andrew Scheer Insists Committee Get Briefed On India Trip Before He Does
    OTTAWA — Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer says he won't accept a private, classified briefing about Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's India trip until after an unclassified version of the briefing is presented at committee.

    Tory Leader Andrew Scheer Insists Committee Get Briefed On India Trip Before He Does

    RCMP Dress As Survey Crew To Catch Drivers Using Cellphones, Not Buckling Up

    RCMP Dress As Survey Crew To Catch Drivers Using Cellphones, Not Buckling Up
    Police in Nova Scotia are going undercover in a novel way to remind drivers to buckle up

    RCMP Dress As Survey Crew To Catch Drivers Using Cellphones, Not Buckling Up

    PrevNext