
From Twister to Twitter: 30 years of Canada Day fun
Come join the fun on July 1 as the University of ݮƵ celebrates the 30th anniversary of the biggest Canada Day party in the region
Come join the fun on July 1 as the University of ݮƵ celebrates the 30th anniversary of the biggest Canada Day party in the region
By Staff Marketing and Strategic CommunicationsYou just know it’s going to be a good party when an Asian elephant named Buke is on the guest list and there’s an attempt at breaking the record for the world’s largest Twister game.
There weren’t any Twitter walls or iSnap photo booths at those first Canada Day parties, but thousands of people showed up to see Buke and hear bands playing on the back of a flatbed truck. This year, the University of ݮƵ and Federation of Students host the 30thCanada Day Celebrationon Tuesday July 1 at Columbia Lake Fields.
The family fun starts at 4 pm. Later in the evening, there will be musical performances by the and Canadian music icon . The fantastic fireworks start at 10 pm.
While the Twister record remained unbroken in those early years, Buke was brought in from the African Lion Safari in Cambridge to be greeted by thousands of people. “The students who organized it back then expected a few hundred people, but thousands showed up,” says Nancy Heide, a long-time volunteer.
In later years, people came to hear beloved Canadian author Robert Munsch read from his children’s books or performer Eric Nagler play music on a washtub. This year the award-winning Canadian duo will be at the party.
The beloved author Munsch agreed to come after two student Canada Day volunteers offered to knock on his front door and ask him. “They met his wife, who invited them in for tea, and Bob agreed right there in his kitchen to come to Canada Day!” recalls Dana Evans Laity, another long-time volunteer.
Heide remembers the only year that the fireworks were cancelled: “It was 1999. The weather was awful all day - cold and windy and a lot of rain,” she recalls. “The fireworks were cancelled at 8 pm but the skies cleared by 10 and thousands of people showed up looking for the awesome fireworks display.”
There were also Teddy Bear contests, elegant wind climbers and volunteering at the event was often just as fun as attending. Evans Laity recalls the year that volunteers had just sat down to share some leftover pizza when a truck pulled up and two fire extinguishers fell off, spraying the pizzas. “We lost all the volunteer pizzas,” she says. “It was pretty funny, disappointing and amazing all at once.”
But the volunteers didn't go hungry that year or any other, says Evans Laity. "Our long-time partner, Domino's Pizza, donates fresh, hot pizzas for all our hungry volunteers!"
Here's a look at last year's celebrations:
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The Kitchener-ݮƵ Oktoberfest Rogers Women of the Year awards recognize leaders for outstanding community contributions
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Honouring a rich legacy, and looking ahead to new ways of celebrating the bold spirit of the ݮƵ community
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More than 100,000 children and youth from across the region are discovering the wonders of science and technology through the University of ݮƵ
The University of ݮƵ acknowledges that much of our work takes place on the traditional territory of the Neutral, Anishinaabeg, and Haudenosaunee peoples. Our main campus is situated on the Haldimand Tract, the land granted to the Six Nations that includes six miles on each side of the Grand River. Our active work toward reconciliation takes place across our campuses through research, learning, teaching, and community building, and is co-ordinated within the Office of Indigenous Relations.