Quebec Winter Carnival
Quebec Winter Carnival Carnaval de Québec | |
---|---|
Bonhomme Carnaval in 2011 | |
Genre | Festival |
Begins | End of January |
Ends | Mid February |
Frequency | Annually |
Location(s) | Quebec City |
Country | Canada |
Website | |
Carnaval de Québec |
The Quebec Winter Carnival or the Carnaval de Québec is a festival held in Quebec City.
After being held on and off since 1894, the Carnaval de Québec has been held uninterruptedly since 1955. That year Bonhomme, the mascot of the festival, made his first appearance.[1] Up to one million people attended the Carnaval de Québec in 2006 making it one of the largest winter festivals in the world.[2]
Activities and attractions
The most famous attractions of this winter festival are the night-time and daytime parades led by mascot Bonhomme Carnaval. The parades wind through the upper city, decorated for the occasion with lights and ice sculptures.
Numerous public and private parties, shows and balls are held across the city, some of them outside in the bitter cold, testimony to the Québécois' fabled joie de vivre.
Other major events include:
- A masquerade ball with up to 400 participants at the grand ballroom of the Château Frontenac.
- The opening and closing ceremonies taking place at the Ice Palace before thousands of participants, Bonhomme and the mayor of Quebec.
- Outdoor sport events (snowboarding, ice canoe, snowshoes, hockey, dog-sledding, etc., some of them part of World Championship tournaments) inside and outside the city.
- Free outdoor public banquets (brunch, breakfast, etc.).
- The Canadian, Québécois, International and Student artist snow sculpture contests on the Plains of Abraham, the main setting of the carnival. The Plains are a public city park and stay open for leisure activities, including snowshoeing and cross-country skiing trails, during carnival time. Part of the Plains around the Citadel is transformed into an outdoor winter amusement park with various family-themed activities, including the display of the three main snow-sculpting contests (Canada's provinces, Quebec's regions, International) and the traditional bikini snow bath event (bain de neige).
Outdoor dance parties are held at the Ice Palaces.
- Kiosks and other outlets in the city sell the Bonhomme effigy tag that grants admission into most of the events, although some are free outside the main site.
- Most commercial main streets are decorated and some bars and restaurants set up a winter patio in front of their establishments.
- Bonhomme – short for bonhomme de neige ("snowman") is the official ambassador of the festivities, the castle lord of the Ice Palace. Bonhomme is a large snowman sporting a red cap, black buttons and a ceinture fléchée.
- It is traditional to drink Caribou, a hot alcoholic beverage, to keep warm.
- The public auction is a fundraising event in aid of the carnival. This auction features many goods and services donated for silent auction and live auction.
Feasts and restaurants
- The Business Leaders' Luncheon, organized by the Québec City Chamber of Commerce.
- The Calgary Stampede Flap Jack Breakfast. In 2008, carnival-goers were served by Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
- The 'Restaurant Partners' Campaign is a 179-day promotion during which Québec City restaurants offer customers a special menu for a fixed price throughout the carnival (including appetizer, soup, or salad, a main course, and a dessert).
Races and tournaments
- A sleigh race in which drivers and their horses take part in a single- and double-harness race on the Plains of Abraham.
- An Ice canoe race on the St. Lawrence river.
- The Québec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament (not officially part of the carnival program since 1977).
- The Snowboard World Cup in Quebec City (not part of the carnival official program).
Also not part of the official program but worth a visit or a stay, the Quebec City Ice Hotel (Quebec) is open every year from early January to late March with its bar, nightclub, exhibition galleries and ceremonial chapel.
Gallery
-
Ice sculpture (2005)
-
Family venue (2006)
-
Ice Palace (2009)
-
Parade in Montreal (2011)
-
Canoe race (2011)
-
Ice Palace (2011)
-
Toboggan at Terrasse Dufferin
References
- ↑ Daniel Shafto (1 January 2009). Carnival. Infobase Publishing. p. 80. ISBN 978-1-4381-2660-9.
- ↑ Hilary Davidson; Paul Karr; Herbert Bailey Livesey; Bill McRae; Donald Olson (14 August 2006). Frommer's Canada: With the best hiking & outdoor adventures. John Wiley & Sons. p. 300. ISBN 978-0-470-04457-5.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Carnaval de Québec. |
- Official website
- Quebec Winter Carnaval virtual tour in panoramic photography
- Tornoipee-wee.qc.ca
- Fissnowboard.com
- Icehotel-canada.com