Santa's getting a new ride for his upcoming stop in Kitchener-Waterloo
Santa’s helpers are making a list and measuring twice.
The team, made up of staff and students from Conestoga College’s School of Trades and Apprenticeship in Waterloo, have volunteered their time to build and design a brand new sleigh for Old Saint Nick, which will debut at the KW Santa Claus Parade on Saturday, Nov. 16.
Up until this year, Santa had been riding on the same float since 1979.
Mary D’Alton, the chief fundraising officer for the KW Lions Club, said they felt it was time for the old float to retire.
“Poor Santa, came to us last year, said: ‘I don’t think I can make this float one more time.’”
So the Lions Club reached out to the college, who agreed to help build a new one.
“We were a little out of our comfort zone,” said Jeff Willsie, one of the chairs of trades and apprenticeship. “Float building is not something that's necessarily in our wheelhouse but we've been learning as we go.”
Chris Sine, a shop technologist at Conestoga College, oversaw the project and its design.
“I came up with the idea of the reindeer flying over top of houses, something that's normal on Christmas. And then I just was like: ‘I can build five houses.’”
The Kitchener Lions Club, which puts on the parade every year, said the Bank of Montreal paid for all the construction materials and each individual reindeer was sponsored by different local businesses.
The new reindeer on Santa's sleigh. (Courtesy: Christopher Sine)
“As you know, reindeer don’t necessarily exist here in Waterloo Region,” D’Alton said. “They've been coming in from all over, from Greenland to the North Pole, some from northern Canada. They all just had to be the right reindeer for Santa. We don't choose them. He chooses them. We arrange the sponsorship.”
Santa's old sleigh, alongside the frame for his new parade float. (Courtesy: Christopher Sine)
Santa’s sleigh is now the only original element on the float. Everything else, from the fresh snow to the reindeer, are all brand new.
There’s only one missing piece – Rudolph – whose bright red nose will lead Santa to Waterloo Region for the parade.
The Kitchener Lions Club Santa Claus Parade will make its way down the streets of Kitchener and Waterloo on Nov. 16, starting at 10 am.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
DEVELOPING Canada's jobless rate jumps to near 8-year high of 6.8% in November
Canada's unemployment rate rose more than expected to 6.8 per cent in November, a near-eight-year high excluding the pandemic years, even as the economy added a net 50,500 jobs, data showed on Friday, likely boosting chances of a large interest rate cut next week.
3 climbers from the U.S. and Canada are believed to have died in a fall on New Zealand's highest peak
Three mountain climbers — two from the U.S. and one from Canada — missing for five days on Aoraki, New Zealand's tallest peak, are believed to have died in a fall, the authorities said Friday.
Purolator, UPS pause shipments from couriers amid Canada Post strike
Purolator and UPS have paused shipments from some courier companies as they try to work through a deluge of deliveries brought on by the Canada Post strike.
DEVELOPING Police scour New York for suspect two days after UnitedHealth executive gunned down
Armed with a growing file of clues, New York police on Friday were scouring surveillance videos and asking the public for help in their search for the masked assailant who gunned down a UnitedHealth executive on a Midtown Manhattan sidewalk.
opinion How will the weak Canadian dollar affect your holiday and travel plans?
As the Canadian dollar loses ground against major global currencies, personal finance contributor Christopher Liew explains how current exchange rates can impact your travel plans, and shares tips to help you plan smarter and protect your wallet.
The world has been warming faster than expected. Scientists now think they know why
Last year was the hottest on record, oceans boiled, glaciers melted at alarming rates, and it left scientists scrambling to understand exactly why.
Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim admits to being 'orange pilled' in Bitcoin interview
Bitcoin is soaring to all-time highs, and Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim wants the city to get in on the action.
German island festival passes peacefully after criticism over practice of men hitting women
An annual festival on a German North Sea island that had drawn criticism over a practice of men hitting women with cow's horns passed without reports of assaults this year, police said Friday.
Could the discovery of an injured, emaciated dog help solve the mystery of a missing B.C. man?
When paramedic Jim Barnes left his home in Fort St. John to go hunting on Oct. 18, he asked his partner Micaela Sawyer — who’s also a paramedic — if she wanted to join him. She declined, so Barnes took the couple’s dog Murphy, an 18-month-old red golden retriever with him.