Toronto Star

Santa to swap sleigh for wheels

This Christmas, St. Nick will get a pandemic-safe, open-air ride in Calgary

- LAUREN KRUGEL

CALGARY— For Santa sightings this holiday season, don’t look for a sleigh soaring across the sky.

Look for a revamped food truck cruising the streets.

Calgary-based Santa School, which trains aspiring St. Nicks and books them for events, had to figure out a way to make visits fun and meaningful for children while keeping a safe distance during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“One of the things that we discovered through the pandemic is that people still wanted normal and they still wanted to have fun experience­s and experience­s with their families and with their friends,” said Jennifer Andrews, the dean of Santa School. “But they weren’t as comfortabl­e doing it in a tradi

tional setting.”

In addition to Santa School, Andrews and her husband, Jeremy, run the Family Squeezed Lemonade food truck business. They took part in pandemic-safe, drive-thru food truck events this summer.

“If we can do it with food trucks, we’ve got to be able to do it with Santa,” said Jeremy Andrews, who calls himself the Santa School “dean’s assistant” and transforms into Santa from time to time.

Santa School has created an open-air cosy Christmas scene

at the back of a truck that can travel to homes and businesses.

There’ll be no sitting on Santa’s knee, but he can sit in a chair and read stories to kids, hear their wishes and pose for photos from a two-metre distance.

“It’s basically Santa’s living room on wheels,” said Jennifer Andrews.

In an ordinary year, Santa School holds two-day courses in which would-be Santas from around the world learn how to develop their characters, interact with kids, perfect their look and project their “ho ho hos” in

just the right way. The idea is that Santa can’t be everywhere at once, so he needs a team of regional representa­tives.

The usual Santa classes, which include sessions with acting, dancing and singing teachers, didn’t go ahead this fall. Many participan­ts are older men, who are at higher risk of getting severely sick from COVID-19.

“That doesn’t seem like a very responsibl­e thing to do right now, to have people flying in from all over the world, getting together,” said Jeremy Andrews.

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Calgary-based Santa School, which trains aspiring St. Nicks and books them for events, will use a revamped food truck, seen here, to create a safe Christmas experience for children.
JEFF MCINTOSH THE CANADIAN PRESS Calgary-based Santa School, which trains aspiring St. Nicks and books them for events, will use a revamped food truck, seen here, to create a safe Christmas experience for children.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada