Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Five-year-old business boy sells homemade blocks to Yukon toy store

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Dec, 2014 11:27 AM

    WHITEHORSE — Huxley Briggs was just tall enough to see over the store counter, but that didn't throw the five-year-old off his pitch to sell his Yukon-wood building blocks.

    When the young entrepreneur approached Betty Burns at her Yukon toy store he asked to speak to the owner about buying his homemade blocks.

    "I took one look at him and my heart melted. I actually teared up," Burns said of the day the boy walked into Angellina's Toy and Children's Boutique.

    "He said he is five years old and makes the blocks all by himself ... and he had an idea he could sell them."

    The rectangles and wedges came nicely packaged in plastic with a label in his own printing that read "Huxley's Block Company."

    Burns, who's also a Grade 1 teacher, began negotiating on a price.

    "He said 'five dollars' and I didn't say anything and I looked over at his mom ... She nodded and said 'yes.'"

    Burns thought Huxley might have been under-valuing the product and she offered to buy 10 sets — as many as he could manage to make — for $10 each.

    The sets sold out in one day and Burns now has a waiting list.

    The business-boy spirit didn't surprise Huxley's mother, Amoree Briggs, who said she and her husband often talk with their son about saving money and investments.

    She said Huxley got the idea from looking over some scrap wood in her husband's shop. The boy also knew that his two-year-old brother really liked to play with the blocks.

    Bernard Briggs and his son then spent a couple of hours working on the idea together.

    Many of the blocks were made by Huxley himself using power tools, which his mom admitted was "a little bit nerve-racking at first."

    "My husband, he was that way when he grew up. His dad showed him early how to use tools. He really explains safety precaution."

    He doesn't cut the small blocks with a saw, she said, but uses a belt sander and a wheel sander and helps his dad with the planer.

    And, with the heavy demand, Huxley has had to call in some extra help, Mom said.

    "He's negotiating with his grandfather to come out and help him with the next set of blocks. He's agreed to take him out for ice cream and a movie if he comes and helps," she said with a chuckle.

    Huxley, who is kindergarten age and has been home schooled, has purchased himself a toy, bought his sister some knitting supplies and put some cash into an investment account with the block proceeds.

    Burns is selling the blocks for $20 each and is donating the profit to Big Brothers and Big Sisters of Yukon, the family's charity of choice.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Accused Of Shooting Kamloops Mountie Injured As Second Officer Fired Back

    Man Accused Of Shooting Kamloops Mountie Injured As Second Officer Fired Back
    British Columbia's police watchdog says a man accused of shooting a Mountie in Kamloops, B.C., sustained a gunshot injury to his arm during an exchange of gunfire with a second officer.

    Man Accused Of Shooting Kamloops Mountie Injured As Second Officer Fired Back

    Young B.C. Football Player Paralyzed From Neck Down By Enterovirus D68

    Young B.C. Football Player Paralyzed From Neck Down By Enterovirus D68
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Within six days, Evan Mutrie went from being a football player for the Kamloops Broncos to being on life support, paralyzed from the neck down after contracting a rare virus.

    Young B.C. Football Player Paralyzed From Neck Down By Enterovirus D68

    RCMP Arrest Suspect In Shooting That Critically Injured B.C. Mountie

    RCMP Arrest Suspect In Shooting That Critically Injured B.C. Mountie
    VICTORIA — A 36-year-old man who is known to police has been arrested by members of an emergency-response team in Kamloops, B.C., just hours after an RCMP officer was shot and critically wounded.

    RCMP Arrest Suspect In Shooting That Critically Injured B.C. Mountie

    Tests Confirm Avian Influenza Strain At B.C. Farms As H5N2

    Tests Confirm Avian Influenza Strain At B.C. Farms As H5N2
    VANCOUVER — The type of avian influenza responsible for an outbreak at poultry farms in southwestern British Columbia is H5N2, a source has confirmed — the same virus behind at least three other previous outbreaks at Canadian farms.

    Tests Confirm Avian Influenza Strain At B.C. Farms As H5N2

    Kinder Morgan President Says Policing Costs Are Not Company's Responsibility

    Kinder Morgan President Says Policing Costs Are Not Company's Responsibility
    BURNABY, B.C. — The president of Kinder Morgan says his company isn't responsible for the policing bill related to pipeline protests at a Metro Vancouver conservation site.

    Kinder Morgan President Says Policing Costs Are Not Company's Responsibility

    Class-action Against Government 'Biggest Battle' Of His Life: Disabled War Vet

    Class-action Against Government 'Biggest Battle' Of His Life: Disabled War Vet
    VANCOUVER — Major Mark Campbell was lying in a hospital bed, just starting to comprehend losing both his legs above the knees in a Taliban ambush, when he found out the federal government had stripped his lifetime military pension.

    Class-action Against Government 'Biggest Battle' Of His Life: Disabled War Vet