Life in progress

Victoria Day

21 Comments

Here in Canada, we celebrate the birthday of Queen Victoria (May 24th) on the Monday before it. Today would be that day this year.

When I was growing up I knew the holiday as firecracker day. My parents and their best friends would buy fireworks and set them off in the back yard, always ending with the burning school house. Secretly, this was my favourite.

Ours was the size of the first one they lit.

As I moved into adulthood, however, the holiday became better known as the May 2-4 weekend. This meant the first long weekend of camping, cases of 24 beers, and if we were smart, a few packages of hot dogs came on the trip along with a few bottles of Jack Daniels.

My first experience of the kind would have been about 1988. We piled into half a dozen cars and headed to Sauble Beach, to a campground run by bikers. There were guard geese there – my first encounter with those particularly vicious animals was luckily not a close one.

Much booze and a few cold weiners (it was too rainy to light a fire) into the weekend… let’s just say I was longing for the burning schoolhouse – or burning anything by the time Monday morning rolled around.

But such is the experience of life. Ah, youth. Now I’m just trying to get through a day off school for the kids.

Are you a Canadian with a great remembrance of Victoria Day? A favourite camping trip, perhaps?

Unknown's avatar

Author: Linda G. Hill

There's a writer in here, clawing her way out.

21 thoughts on “Victoria Day

  1. LAMarcom's avatar

    Certainly not Canadian: Texan (as you do know). but also American (don’t laugh). Just yesterday finished watching the Mini Series, “John Adams.” Day before that, watched a very good documentary on Thomas Jefferson. Day before that: Teddy Roosevelt. And on and on…(Yeah, I like documentaries)
    *sigh*
    Yes, I am ‘Texan-Merican’, but I do admire all the Canucks I have had the pleasure to work with (mostly in Iraq and Afghanistan)
    Great post and loved the video; speaks to the pyromaniac in my soul.
    Cheers!
    Lance

    Like

  2. Maggie Wilson's avatar

    Mine is pretty much a carbon copy of yours, Linda. Burning School house closed down the household fireworks display… we called it firecracker day… usually the lilacs were out. When we got older, Sauble was the destination. My brother bought a cottage on Silver Lake, just a mile inland from Lake Huron. Many, MANY May 2-4’s and other 2-4’s experienced there.

    Like

  3. Carrie's avatar

    I lived in Canada for a short time when I was a child. I vaguely remember the holiday. I think maybe we went to a lake for the day. Seems familiar, anyway. 🙂 Hope you have a great day!

    Like

  4. D.G.Kaye's avatar

    Ah, yes, the burning schoolhouse lol. I remember well. We’d have street parties and everyone contributed so many beautiful fireworks. For some reason, the standard weather never changed. Usually rained and sometimes had to wear a coat. What is it with this weather-crazy weekend? 🙂

    Like

  5. swo8's avatar

    I’m Canadian and I remember the Victoria Day long weekend of my youth. We would bundle up to go to the park and watch the fireworks. They were really something.
    Leslie

    Like

    • Linda G. Hill's avatar

      Oh yes… It’s still very cold at night! It seems to me July 1st has taken over for the most part in the fireworks department though.
      Thanks for sharing, Leslie. 🙂

      Like

  6. markbialczak's avatar

    I am an American taking note of your holiday that involved cases of beer and a few bottles of Jack Daniels, Linda G.
    Down here we called that Friday.
    Hahahaha. Just joking with you.
    Happy Victoria Day!

    Like

  7. dF's avatar

    I remember Victoria Day as THE day to put plants into the garden — meaning the plants were probably finally safe from frosts.

    Like

Leave a reply to LAMarcom Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.