End of the road looms for retiring buggy ride business owner - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 01:48 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

End of the road looms for retiring buggy ride business owner

Basil Oickle says he'll be looking to pass over the reins to a "much younger person" when he retires in a year or two.

Basil Oickle says he'll be looking to pass over the reins when he retires in a year or two

Basil Oickle, owner of Trot in Time, with his horse Clifford. (CBC)

Basil Oickleis getting ready to doff his top hat and bow tie and lay down his reins.

"I'd like to see what it's like to be bored," says theowner of Trot in Time, a buggy rides business inLunenburg, N.S. "Sometime in the next year or two, I'll be passing the reins over to a much younger person who can do this," said Oickle, 60.

Oickle's business started in 1996 by fluke. He owned a vintage wagon from 1888 that he kept inhis yard as a lawn ornament. When a neighbour suggested he find a horse and offer rides, Trot in Time was born.

Rides and stories

When he hit the streets of Lunenburg for the first time in May 1996, he said he made about $16. Currently he has six horses who work three days on and two days off and he operates tours every day of the week.

Basil Oickle has been in business for 22 years. (CBC)

The tour weaves through historic sites of Lunenburg, a UNESCO heritage town. Drivers tell tales of Lunenburg's colourful rum-running past, the fishing industry, who owned what home from the 1700s and, of course, Nova Scotia's famous Bluenose schooner.

All of the buggiesare replicas of the 1888 original, which is still in use today. Oickle said the old buggy's wagon design makes the tour such a hit because, unlike many modern horse wagons, people riding in the back can always see the horse.

22 years in business

Clifford, one of Oickle's horses, is a charmer who reverses when Oickle pretends to pull his tail. Clifford looks both ways before going through stop signs.

Basil Oickle has six horses who work three days on and two days off and he operates tours every day of the week. (CBC)

"I tell you, I wish I could clone this fellow.If I had hundred of these guys, I'd buy every one," Oickle said.

Oickle said he has lost count of how many tours he's run in 22 years of business, but he guessed it's somewhere in the thousands. Oickle said he is thankful for every time he's been able to show off his town to people from every corner of the world.