
Every day is Christmas at this Quebec City boutique
Quebec City and Regions Marc Gaboury has run the Boutique de NoĆ«l de QuĆ©bec at the heart of Quebec City's tourist district since 1986.(Franca Mignacca/CBC) Marc Gaboury featured in a news clipping about his boutique as he gets ready to move locations in 1995.(Submitted by Marc Gaboury) Stockings, ornaments and snow globes are sorted by colour and theme at the Boutique de NoĆ«l de QuĆ©bec.(Franca Mignacca/CBC) The store is located in the heart of Quebec City's tourist district.(Franca Mignacca/CBC) Every day is Christmas at this Quebec City boutique The Boutique de NoĆ«l de QuĆ©bec aims to spread holiday cheer all year long After walking a few laps around the shop, Maria Castagna picks up a glass ornament in the form of a pink, sparkly ice cream cone and smiles widely. It resembles one she had when she was little, so realistic she remembers trying to lick the sprinkles off. "This reminded me of it," she said. Castagna made the trip to Quebec City from New Jersey, drawn in by the picturesque, snowglobe-like scenery around the holidays. That feeling of nostalgia is what Marc Gaboury hoped to awaken when he first decided to open the Boutique de NoĆ«l de QuĆ©bec, in the heart of Old Quebec, in the summer of 1986. Having watched his father run a grocery store for years in the cityās tourist district, Gaboury felt ready to open a business of his own. One evening, as he sat around chatting with friends, he came to the realization there was something missing in the area: A year-round Christmas store. Growing up, Gaboury's mother often visited Maine, where he saw similar Christmas boutiques. With Quebec City being so popular with tourists, he suspected it would be a winning concept. "In the first summer, we had a lot of customers already," Gaboury said. āOne customer in five was telling me, 'Are you crazy to sell Christmas stuff?' Because this was new in Quebec." Save for the occasional Easter bunny or skeleton around Halloween, the two-storey shop is dedicated almost exclusively to Christmas all year, from top to bottom. Animated snow globes, Santa figurines, stockings and ornaments of all shapes and colours line the shelves, which are painted in a dark green, evoking an enchanted forest. As with most restaurants and stores in the area, Gaboury has some quiet periods in the year, but for the most part it has grown steadily over the last four decades. It has become even more popular since the city introduced the German Christmas Market, which has kiosks right across the street from the store. Tourists brought in nearly $250 million last December The market has become a major attraction, drawing more than 600,000 people last year, according to Quebec Cityās tourism bureau, Destination QuĆ©bec CitĆ©. With ongoing tensions over U.S. tariffs, the tourism bureau is forecasting a three per cent drop in American tourists. But Quebec City has also seen a jump in domestic tourism, more than making up for that decrease, the bureau says....
Preview: ~500 words
Continue reading at Cbc
Read Full Article