Tricks, trips and trends: Halloween is becoming a big-spending holiday - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 29, 2024, 09:23 PM | Calgary | -16.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Edmonton

Tricks, trips and trends: Halloween is becoming a big-spending holiday

Canadians are embracing the spooky season and Halloween spending is rebounding to nearly pre-pandemic levels. One of the trends is experiences like Edmontons Pumpkins After Dark.

Experiences like 'Pumpkins After Dark' have many embracing the spooky season

Some of the 6,000 real and synthetic gourds on display as part of Pumpkins After Dark in Edmonton's Borden Park. (Adrienne Lamb/CBC)

A new event featuring 6,000 real and synthetic hand-carved pumpkins is drawing largecrowds for a nighttime stroll through Edmonton's Borden Park.

Kevin Blackburn, a co-owner with Lantern Events Inc., said 3,000 to 4,000 people a night have been taking in the experience since it opened on Sept.29.

"I love Halloween," Blackburnsaid."We're very excited about how things have turned out and we're very much looking forward to coming back next year."

Kevin Blackburn at Pumpkins After Dark. (Adrienne Lamb/CBC)

The warmer fall weather has helped attendance but so did people's eagerness to celebrate the spooky season free of pandemic restrictions, he said.

The company is also runningPumpkins After Dark shows in Milton, Ont., Burnaby, B.C., and in Calgary.

Pumpkins After Dark

2 years ago
Duration 2:19
Tag along on a tour of the Halloween attraction 'Pumpkins After Dark' in Edmonton's Borden Park.

You can see more at Pumpkins After Dark on the Halloween Edition of Our Edmonton on Saturday at 10 a.m., Sunday at noon and 11 a.m. on Monday on CBC TV and CBC Gem.

"Edmontonians really do love festivals, they love events people like to come out," said Blackburn.

He noted that people are spending more on costumes, more on decorations and more on fun things to do in the fall.

"Halloween is the fastest growing consumer holiday in North America," he said.

In fact, the spooky season has now overtaken Easter as the second-biggest spending holidayin Canada after Christmas, according to Heather Thomson,executive director at the University of Alberta's Alberta School of Business Centre for Cities and Communities.

In 2019, before the pandemic, the average Canadian spent just under $100 during the Halloween season.

"It was $50in 2020, It was $68last year, and $87 this year so we're seeing a really consistent bounce back in terms of spending," Thomson said.
Emmett Booth, 6, Callum Booth, 2, and their mother, Heather Thomson, get into the Halloween spirit. Thomson is executive director of the U of A's Alberta School of Business Centre for Cities and Communities. (Submitted by Heather Thomson)

She's drawing on data from the Retail Council of Canada, Statistics Canada and credit card companies.

Most of that money is spenton candy, pumpkins and other decorations and costumes, but Thomson said spending is increasing on Halloween experiences like Dark, Deadmonton and other corn mazes, haunted houses and ghost tours.

"People are looking at experiences to sell, and that's a new form of retail, and this is a huge part of it," she said.

As people start to incorporate more experiences into their lives, those experiences become traditions. Thomson said annual traditions are profitable and a good business model because they tap into nostalgia, with families often returning year after year.

Crowds of people taking in Pumpkins After Dark in Edmonton this month. (Adrienne Lamb/CBC)

For Natasha Guindon, all the Halloween hype means more work as a pumpkin carver.

Guindon has been carving up real pumpkins in a display tent at the Pumpkins After Dark event.

"You work for sometimes up to eight hours on a piece and to see it glow, that warm glow, is just so rewarding," saidGuindon, who started carving professionally in 2017.

Most of the pumpkins in the display are synthetic, made from a polyurethane foam.

It takes between six and eight artists an entire year to carve the displays for the Edmonton show.

Edmonton artist Natasha Guindon at work during the Pumpkins After Dark event at Borden Park. (Adreinne Lamb/CBC)

The faux gourds "carve a lot like a regular pumpkin," saidGuindon, who's now able to do this work from July to the middle of September.

She said the appeal for her is passing along that jack-o'-lantern glow to the kids.

"I think there's a generation of us that had really magical Halloweens," she said.

"I won't name the generation, but it begins with an M, and I think the reason we had such magical Halloweens is the reason it keeps lasting."

Tickets for Pumpkins After Dark cost between $18 and $22.The event closes on Oct. 31.