Calgary Herald

ALL IS CALM ON `TIBB'S EVE'.

- SARAH SMELLIE

ST. JOHN'S, N. L. • In Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, Dec. 23 — also known as Tibb's Eve — is an unofficial holiday unique to the province, born out of folklore and turned into a big night for St. John's bars.

For Chris Shortall, a beloved St. John's extrovert known for throwing excellent parties, Tibb's Eve is spent dancing and laughing, going from bar to house party to bar with outstretch­ed arms to greet friends. But not in a global pandemic.

“There's not as many people coming home, because they have to quarantine for two weeks,” Shortall said in a recent interview. “And also there's less events on the go. You can't dance in bars; a lot of events have migrated online.”

Tibb's Eve is a night set aside for friends during the family- focused Christmas

season. In Newfoundla­nd in

Labrador, where many young people move away for school or work, Dec. 23 is a night of big reunions. Tibb's, Shortall said, is when people who are home from away for Christmas head to the bars to catch up and say hello.

“You get to see people you haven't seen in a year,” he said. “And everybody gets drunk because why not? You've got three or four days to get over your hangover and keep drinking and eating with friends and family.”

Folklorist Dale Jarvis, proud author of what he calls the “incredibly nerdy” Wikipedia entry on the holiday, said Tibb's Eve is both an old linguistic expression and a special event. The holiday emerged on the south coast of Newfoundla­nd sometime after the Second World War, he said, adding that it was a day when people could sneak a drink or two before Advent ended on Christmas.

The holiday is also based on an expression about a day that would never really occur — like the day pigs fly, Jarvis

explained. “If I promised to

give you something on Tibb's Eve, you would know you would never actually get it.”

It’s this interpreta­tion of

Tibb's Eve — a day that would never happen — that is perhaps the most pertinent this year, especially for social butterflie­s like Shortall who are missing out on a special night out with old friends.

For Brenda O'reilly, owner

of O’reilly’s Irish Newfoundla­nd Pub, Tibb's in a pandemic means significan­tly fewer customers. “Outside of the George Street Festival and St. Patrick's Day, this is one of those days that we can hang our hat on as one of our best days of the year,” she said.

O'reilly said she began hosting Tibb's Eve night at the pub over a decade ago, when a friend from rural Newfoundla­nd told her about the holiday.

Growing up in Torbay, just outside St. John's, O'reilly had never heard of Tibb's Eve. But she said it sounded like fun: her friend said it was a “free pass” for husbands to have a drink — or several — after finishing Christmas chores. From her friend's telling, the night was called Tipsy's Eve. Say that after a few beers and it sounds like “Tibb's Eve,” she said.

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