Unlike our neighbours to the south who will celebrate their national day on Thursday, Canadians are not especially big on waving the flag.
Many would say that’s one of our saving graces.
There will be some parties, puiblic and private, a few parades and lots of fireworks,.
But for the most part most Canadians are spending what’s left of the long weekend regrouping and catching their collective breath following a rough winter and a spring that never really arrived.
Fitting for a country that has been described as “Nine months of winter and three months of tough sledding,” Canada Day is more about recovery than over-the-top celebrations.
It’s Canada’s 152nd birthday and the 140th anniversary of a public holiday honouringConfederation.
In what many would say true Canadian fashion, there were no official celebrations during the first 12 years of Canada’s existence.
Long known as Dominion Day, July 1st eventually transformed into Canada Day, with the squeaking through of a change to the National Holidays Act in July, 1982.
Matthew Hayday, a University of Guelph history professor, says changes to federal celebrations have been relatively subtle in recent years.
He tells Canadian Press a notable addition has been the more culturally sensitive inclusion of Indigenous traditions.
In a nod to those changes, thirteen-year-old Kiya Bruno, a member of the Samson Cree Nation in Alberta, sang O Canada in Cree and English at Toronto’s Rogers Centre before the Blue Jays game with Kansas City on Saturday afternoon.
That night in Oro-Medonte, Ontario, Mick Jagger wished the 70,000 spectators “Happy Canada Day” at a Rolling Stones concert.
In Canada’s largest city, Toronto, the opposition provincial Liberal Party stepped in to host a Canada Day picnic celebration at the provincial legislature after the governing Progressive-Conservatives cancelled the event, which has been running since 1967 and features a 21-gun military salute, music and other activities.
Meanwhile in New Brunswick, the town of Sussex cancelled its Canada Day parade due to lack of interest.
In Quebec, which celebrated its big day a week ago, those that could, kicked back.
Others–the unlucky ones–spent the day carting and carrying furniture on the province’s unofficial “Moving Day.”
Warm temperatures were forecast.