Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canada 150 proved to be a big draw for tourism operators coast to coast

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Nov, 2017 10:42 AM

    Canada celebrated its 150th birthday in 2017 but it was the tourism industry that got to collect the presents.

    Tourism operators from coast to coast were planning for big events and extra visitors, and in many cases the numbers have exceeded expectations even before the year draws to a close.

    "Double digit increases in every part of the country," said Gary Howard of the Canadian Automobile Association.

    "It's not just international travellers, primarily it was a lot of Canadians who wanted to see more of their country that they hadn't seen before."

    Destination Canada, a federal Crown corporation, ran a campaign aimed at millennials in an effort to instil a "sense of pride" in the country and have them become lifetime ambassadors for Canada both at home and abroad. The organization reported a 16 per cent increase in the number of Canadian millennials who vacationed within the country this year.

    Jantine Van Kregten, director of communications for Ottawa Tourism, said Canada 150 promotions and advertising did a lot to attract people from other countries, as did Lonely Planet and the New York Times naming Canada as the No. 1 place to visit in 2017.

    "I think it did lead people to make the decision, out of any year to visit Canada, this is going to be the year. Canada has always been one of those dream destinations for a lot of overseas visitors," Van Kregten said.

    Howard said there was a lot of preparation leading up to Canada 150 and tourism operators were ready.

    "Cruise lines had larger ships, there was an increase in rail capacity, and tour operators created more Canadian-ized packages," he said.

    Randy Vogel, the owner/operator of the Granville House Bed and Breakfast in Vancouver, said business was booming this year. He's on track for the highest annual revenue in the 20-year history of the business.

    "Canada 150 helped our business out and helped tourism in general," he said, but added that the value of the loonie was also a big factor.

    "A weak Canadian dollar will always attract more business than any of the big campaigns. When you've got an 80 cent dollar to the U.S., reasonable flights, and 150 birthday as a reason to come — we get business."

    At the other end of the country, the Confederation Centre of the Arts in Charlottetown is also reporting a record year.

    "We consciously jumped on this opportunity at the Confederation Centre because after all, it is a memorial to the founding of Canada, so we figured it was impossible to ignore. Right from the first of the year we looked for opportunities to promote it and talk about it," said Carol Horne, the centre's chief marketing officer.

    Horne said aside from packed performances inside the centre, there were free shows outside in the evenings and their Confederation players portrayed historic Canadian figures in vignettes throughout Charlottetown — known as the birthplace of Confederation.

    "The activity level around the building really impressed us," Horne said.

    "Canada 150 helped us draw attention to a lot of things, and people were happy to have lots to do when they got here."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Feds Find More Than A Dozen Who Had Entered US From Canada

    Feds Find More Than A Dozen Who Had Entered US From Canada
    DERBY LINE, Vt. — The U.S. Border Patrol says agents apprehended a group of 16 people from Mexico and two countries in Central America after some of them illegally entered the United States from Canada.

    Feds Find More Than A Dozen Who Had Entered US From Canada

    Politicians Criticize Trudeau's Reaction To Critics Of Energy East Demise

    Politicians Criticize Trudeau's Reaction To Critics Of Energy East Demise
    Federal Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer says Prime Minister Justin Trudeau should not go after critics of the cancelled Energy East pipeline project, but should look to his own actions.

    Politicians Criticize Trudeau's Reaction To Critics Of Energy East Demise

    Local Man Charged With Murder In Death Of Canadian Killed In Belize: Police

    Local Man Charged With Murder In Death Of Canadian Killed In Belize: Police
    Police in Belize say they have charged a 52-year-old man with murder in the shooting death of a Canadian man last week.

    Local Man Charged With Murder In Death Of Canadian Killed In Belize: Police

    #RiderGrandpa Asks If Photo Will Go Viral, But Doesn't Know What Viral Means

    #RiderGrandpa Asks If Photo Will Go Viral, But Doesn't Know What Viral Means
    REGINA — Alex Taylor says her grandfather looked so cute wearing his Saskatchewan Roughriders gear that she had to take his picture.

    #RiderGrandpa Asks If Photo Will Go Viral, But Doesn't Know What Viral Means

    Missing Olympic Boxing Medallist Shawn O'Sullivan Found

    Missing Olympic Boxing Medallist Shawn O'Sullivan Found
    NEWMARKET, Ont. — Police in York Region, north of Toronto, say former Canadian Olympic boxer Shawn O'Sullivan was found early Tuesday, several hours after he was reported missing.

    Missing Olympic Boxing Medallist Shawn O'Sullivan Found

    How Did An Islamic State Flag End Up In Edmonton? Flag Sellers Offer Theories

    How Did An Islamic State Flag End Up In Edmonton? Flag Sellers Offer Theories
    A few years ago, Arif Dewji, owner of House of Flags and Banners in Coquitlam, B.C., got an odd request from a prospective customer.

    How Did An Islamic State Flag End Up In Edmonton? Flag Sellers Offer Theories