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Non-Road Boards => Off-Topic => Topic started by: hotdogPi on October 19, 2013, 04:35:18 PM

Title: The Halloween Thread
Post by: hotdogPi on October 19, 2013, 04:35:18 PM
This thread is about Halloween.

Are you giving away candy for trick or treating? Are you trick or treating yourself?

I am going to be a GPS this Halloween. Here is the intersection the GPS will show: http://goo.gl/maps/CiJzV


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Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: english si on October 19, 2013, 06:35:49 PM
Quote from: 1 on October 19, 2013, 04:35:18 PMAre you giving away candy for trick or treating?
No. Not because I'm a curmudgeon who wonders how the 31st has come to overtake the 5th so massively these days*, but because next door's mum pops around earlier with allergy-safe sweets/chocolate for her twins, and they are the only ones who come visit.

Trick-or-treating, despite massively taking off in the past 15 years (my primary school class managed about 5 person/nights of trick-or-treating out of a potential 200ish**), is typically only done with near neighbours and family friends. Knocking on strangers' doors and demanding treats in exchange for protection from a trick is just not cricket!


*as I have no need to wonder - a mix of Health & Safety stopping fireworks from being blatantly sold (it used to be that most houses have a couple of fireworks, or friends around for a small display on the 5th and then go to a big organised display for charity at the weekend), and US television (especially the Simpsons) exposing our kids to an activity that involves getting lots of sweets. Though going to a bonfire also involved lots of sugary foods.

**though, to be fair, we'd neither heard of it, nor had it crossed our minds for about 5 of our 8 years. The concept wasn't even discussed really until '95, giving only about 60 real chances. And we were far more excited about fireworks night, other than the sweets element of Halloween.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: vdeane on October 19, 2013, 08:27:33 PM
Trick-or-treating is VERY big in America, though mainly the treat part; the trick side fell out of favor over 20 years ago.  Still need to find out if apartment residents in my complex give out candy or not (my parents are obsessed with the question right now, actually).

Probably not dressing up.  I wanted to be Sailor Moon, but that didn't work out and I can't think of what else I'd do (especially since I'm self conscious about my shoulders and especially my belly, so very few sexy costumes would work with me despite my desire for one, plus I'm loathe to spend any money right now).
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: Zeffy on October 19, 2013, 11:33:49 PM
I haven't trick or treated since I was 8. After that, I stopped caring. For the first few years people bitched me out, but finally at middle school it stopped. It never interested me. I just think the concept is stupid, I don't know. When boys dress up like girls it's okay on Halloween, yet on any other day they'd be called some derogatory terms. Then if your costume isn't beyond expensive or isn't high quality, people don't even notice you. Like seriously?

Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: hotdogPi on October 19, 2013, 11:36:53 PM
I have had some very interesting costumes:

Piggy bank (with New Hampshire state quarter)
Aquarium
Calculator
King of Clubs (playing card)
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: NE2 on October 19, 2013, 11:41:16 PM
I dress up as a dirty fucking hippie.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: hotdogPi on October 19, 2013, 11:45:19 PM
Quote from: NE2 on October 19, 2013, 11:41:16 PM

You already are one. Why do you need to dress up as one then?
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: Roadgeek Adam on October 19, 2013, 11:56:52 PM
I stopped once I turned 13. I've either given out candy or walked my sister around ever since.

I do however, have to redesign my entire dorm floor this week...
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: wxfree on October 19, 2013, 11:59:04 PM
I'll be dressing as a government worker and staying home.

I'll be dressing as a Republican.  I'll give one rich kid a box of imported chocolates, and make the other hundred split a Tootsie Roll.

I'll be dressing as a Democrat.  I'll get something nobody likes, like Necco, and make everyone buy it.

The truth is I'll be dressing as a sex offender and keeping the porch light off and not answering the door.  That's what I do every year.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: NE2 on October 20, 2013, 12:02:08 AM
Quote from: 1 on October 19, 2013, 11:45:19 PM
You already are one. Why do you need to dress up as one then?
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: Takumi on October 20, 2013, 12:23:54 AM
I haven't done anything for Halloween in 10 years, but I'm on vacation from work that week so I'm considering going to a party as Al Borland from Home Improvement. I have the beard and general build already.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: oscar on October 20, 2013, 12:31:30 AM
My neighborhood has no children (complex of small garden apartments).   You have to go several blocks to find trick-or-treaters, and the kids there know better than to seek treats in my neighborhood.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: DaBigE on October 20, 2013, 12:32:32 AM
I haven't participated in Halloween since I was in college. Since I live in an apartment, I generally don't have to deal with the holiday. The last costume I wore was Bob the Builder.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: allniter89 on October 20, 2013, 12:58:26 AM
I ALWAYS t or t up to age 11 or so, we usually lived on AF bases so it was pretty safe. Now I live waaay out in the stix so no one comes around which is ok with me. Bah humbug! ;-)
Do they still soap windows, tp trees and light bags of poo (pooing is cool) on fire then ring the doorbell? Not that I've ever done any of these, I heard about them from a friend of a friend :bigass: Does Detroit still experience "hell night" Oct 30th?
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: Alex on October 20, 2013, 02:13:37 AM
Quote from: allniter89 on October 20, 2013, 12:58:26 AM
I ALWAYS t or t up to age 11 or so, we usually lived on AF bases so it was pretty safe. Now I live waaay out in the stix so no one comes around which is ok with me. Bah humbug! ;-)
Do they still soap windows, tp trees and light bags of poo (pooing is cool) on fire then ring the doorbell? Not that I've ever done any of these, I heard about them from a friend of a friend :bigass: Does Detroit still experience "hell night" Oct 30th?

They called that mischief night in Delaware.  Knew several others that were big on that back in my teenage years. Never was one for it myself, nor Halloween after age 12.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: Brandon on October 20, 2013, 07:06:11 AM
Quote from: allniter89 on October 20, 2013, 12:58:26 AM
I ALWAYS t or t up to age 11 or so, we usually lived on AF bases so it was pretty safe. Now I live waaay out in the stix so no one comes around which is ok with me. Bah humbug! ;-)
Do they still soap windows, tp trees and light bags of poo (pooing is cool) on fire then ring the doorbell? Not that I've ever done any of these, I heard about them from a friend of a friend :bigass: Does Detroit still experience "hell night" Oct 30th?

It's Devil's Night, and sadly, yes.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: SP Cook on October 20, 2013, 07:58:24 AM
When I was a kid, Halloween (and you guy know where I grew up) Halloween consisted of two things.

A deal where children (which is to say those 2 or 3 up to about 10 or 12) went to nearby homes of people they knew and got candy.  Depending on the number of kids you had, it ended up being close to a wash. 

A deal where teenage boys up hollers got out of school the next day by cutting trees across the roads. 

That was it.  It was a one-day event.  Nobody decorated their house (other than the occasional pumpkin).  There were no pre-made Halloween decorations.  The candy showed up at the store maybe two weeks before.   If you were an adult, it was a non-event.

Today it seems like Halloween has moved next to Christmas as some kind of month long event.  People decorate houses.  Adults have parties.  Parties are scheduled over the entire week so people can attend several.  They decorate the mall.  People ware costumes to work.  Kids are given presents at school (bags of candy, or, worse yet, bags of tofu based Soylent Yellow and pamphlets full pf bad of bad advice).  I don't think we are too many years from some pol lighting the National Pumpkin on the Mall.

And depending on what day of the week it falls on (around here the county or city governments will "decree" when trick or treat is allowed, and if its obvious (like this year, where its universally Thursday) you just get your local kids), but if it moves around (like next year, being Friday, some places will be Friday, some Saturday, some Thursday, etc) you will get roving bands of kids from other towns.

Don't get it.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: Laura on October 20, 2013, 08:14:55 AM
I went through a phase in middle school where I didn't trick or treat, but then started walking around again in high school. In college, they had a trick or treat event (usually the friday before halloween) where the local neighborhood kids could come to the college and trick or treat in the dorms and we had games set up for them in our practice gym.

I think Halloween has changed a lot since I was a kid, good and bad. I love the fact that its more acceptable to dress up as an adult and to have adult parties - I've been to parties every year since I was 18. I usually wear my costume to work, too. What I don't like is how Halloween is regulated to be "safer" now for kids. A lot of HOA communities have set hours and times where you can trick or treat, and a lot of the time, that isn't on Halloween. When I was a kid, you went out at dark (5:30) and stayed out until 8:30, and these were universally accepted times . Now with daylight savings pushed back, kids don't usually come out until 6:30, and neighborhoods force them to stop at 8. We also could walk around our neighborhoods ourselves, which I see less of these days (the adults were too busy giving out candy or trying to scare us to walk with us!)

I'm dressing as a monarch butterfly this year. I like to dress as things with wings. Last year I was an owl, the year before I was a bat! I loved that costume - I took a black umbrella, cut it in half, and sewed it to the sleeves and sides of a black hoodie. My favorite costume as a kid: I dressed as a "puppy for sale". I wore a Dalmatian costume with a box around me painted "puppies for sale" and stapled some stuffed animal puppies around the box.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: NE2 on October 20, 2013, 08:15:57 AM
Get off my lawn.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: 1995hoo on October 20, 2013, 02:04:08 PM
I resent the high school kids who don't bother to wear any kind of costume and just show up wanting candy. They know people will give it to them because we don't want our houses egged or something. Some years I just darken all the lights so nobody comes to our house. Depends on my mood (also some years we haven't been home due to football or hockey and so we darkened the house then too).

I think if we give out candy this year I'm buying all Reese's peanut butter cups. We like them and it will annoy the legume-loathing freaks out there.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: corco on October 20, 2013, 02:11:08 PM
I'm going to be a white guy for halloween, same as the last several years.

I live in a really small town and I understand trick or treating is a Big Thing here, so we'll see what happens. I've mostly kept off the radar with my neighbors though, so we'll see if my house is avoided. I'll buy candy I like and eat it if nobody else does. 
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: Thing 342 on October 20, 2013, 03:38:18 PM
Quote from: 1995hoo on October 20, 2013, 02:04:08 PM
I resent the high school kids who don't bother to wear any kind of costume and just show up wanting candy. They know people will give it to them because we don't want our houses egged or something. Some years I just darken all the lights so nobody comes to our house. Depends on my mood (also some years we haven't been home due to football or hockey and so we darkened the house then too).

I think if we give out candy this year I'm buying all Reese's peanut butter cups. We like them and it will annoy the legume-loathing freaks out there.

Same reason I don't plan on giving out candy this year.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: Molandfreak on October 20, 2013, 10:51:17 PM
I stopped actually trick-or-treating when I was maybe 12, and only gone to a select few friends' houses until I was 14. I've had a bonfire in my front yard the past few years and handed out candy from there. We don't get very many trick-or-treaters, though. There aren't too many small children in my neighborhood. My brother gets the leftover candy because I don't like candy very much. If we hand out any Snickers or Reeces, he gives them all to me because I like them and he doesn't. That lasts me a good few months stashed away in my room (I can't handle more than one at a time).

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Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: hbelkins on October 21, 2013, 10:51:43 AM
Most communities around here limit trick-or-treating to kids 12 and under. Also, many communities are beginning to sponsor community events where businesses and organizations hand out candy and/or other stuff (like dentist's offices giving out toothbrushes) and individuals can buy the candy they normally would hand out at their door and donate it to the community effort and then they get a sign for their door saying they're participating in the community event and go there to get the candy they otherwise would get at that home. (How's that for a run-on sentence?)

I live in a rural area, so when I was a kid trick-or-treating was done by car. We only went to houses where people we knew well lived, and there were a few places where special treats always awaited (one former co-worker of my mother's who always fixed popcorn balls for a few select kids).

I'm living at the same place where I grew up. We're in the country, off a main state road in our county but with a long driveway off the road. We haven't had trick-or-treaters since we lived there, and my dad didn't have any for several years prior when he lived there before he went to a nursing home and then died. He always bought candy to give out just in case.

Trick-or-treat is usually limited to the hours of 6-8 p.m. on Halloween or the designated trick-or-treat night (often Saturday night if the 31st falls on a Sunday). Now that the time changes in November instead of the last weekend in October, there's still usually daylight for the first hour of trick-or-treat.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: Big John on October 21, 2013, 11:20:38 AM
When I lived in suburban Milwaukee, there would be a few vanloads of children who obviously came from the inner city to go trick-or-treating there.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: PHLBOS on October 21, 2013, 03:51:13 PM
Quote from: Alex on October 20, 2013, 02:13:37 AMThey called that mischief night in Delaware.  Knew several others that were big on that back in my teenage years.
Where I grew up (northeastern MA), mischief night occurred on the same night as Halloween.

Quote from: SP Cook on October 20, 2013, 07:58:24 AM
When I was a kid, Halloween (and you guy know where I grew up) Halloween consisted of two things.

A deal where children (which is to say those 2 or 3 up to about 10 or 12) went to nearby homes of people they knew and got candy.  Depending on the number of kids you had, it ended up being close to a wash. 

A deal where teenage boys up hollers got out of school the next day by cutting trees across the roads.
The latter was considered mischief night; although most incidents in my area consisted of egging, shaving cream on car windows and or T.P.ing trees and bushes. 

Quote from: SP Cook on October 20, 2013, 07:58:24 AMThat was it.  It was a one-day event.  Nobody decorated their house (other than the occasional pumpkin).  There were no pre-made Halloween decorations.  The candy showed up at the store maybe two weeks before.   If you were an adult, it was a non-event.
Same here.  Although there was one or two years I attended a Halloween party at a friend's/nieghbor's house the weekend before Halloween circa 1970s. 

Quote from: SP Cook on October 20, 2013, 07:58:24 AMToday it seems like Halloween has moved next to Christmas as some kind of month long event.  People decorate houses.  Adults have parties.  Parties are scheduled over the entire week so people can attend several.  They decorate the mall.  People ware costumes to work.  Kids are given presents at school (bags of candy, or, worse yet, bags of tofu based Soylent Yellow and pamphlets full pf bad of bad advice).  I don't think we are too many years from some pol lighting the National Pumpkin on the Mall.
I didn't start seeing homes go bonkers w/Halloween decorations until the 1990s; but you're right, I've seen some homes more decorated for Halloween than for Christmas.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: 1995hoo on October 21, 2013, 04:08:45 PM
This morning I saw a large pickup behind me on the road ("large" meaning bigger than an F-150) with a plastic jack-o-lantern face on the grille in a similar fashion to those silly wreaths or bows some people put on their cars at Christmas. Made me roll my eyes.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: Alps on October 21, 2013, 08:00:42 PM
I've gotten 1-2 bell rings a year - most children in this complex are from India, where Halloween isn't a thing, but a couple of the more Americanized ones do come around. (There must be non-Indian children, though I have seen none to date.) This year, I'll be in New Zealand on the 31st. Australia is a land that's starting to figure out that Halloween is an excuse to party, but I get the strong feeling NZ will be just another Thursday.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: english si on October 21, 2013, 09:15:21 PM
Quote from: Steve on October 21, 2013, 08:00:42 PMAustralia is a land that's starting to figure out that Halloween is an excuse to party
They need one?
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: kurumi on October 21, 2013, 11:50:00 PM
My best costume was Hillary Clinton, a week before the 1992 election. Borrowed a skirt and sweater from a female friend of a similar size (who wasn't offended that I asked, which was nice). We hosted a party for about 30 people, median age probably about 24. What I should have expected but didn't was the number of times some drunk dude would grab my ass. :-/

Afterward I returned the clothes back to friend #1 ("Abby") while friend #2 ("Brianna"), unaware of the Halloween thing, was looking on.

Me: Hey Abby, here's your clothes back, thanks!
Abby: No problem!
Brianna: wat

And, looking back, I never explained it to Brianna. Still friends, so I guess she came to terms with it. (And no I am not blawp, these were just friends)
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: Takumi on October 22, 2013, 08:31:36 AM
Quote from: kurumi on October 21, 2013, 11:50:00 PM
(And no I am not blawp, these were just friends)
:rofl:
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: roadman on October 22, 2013, 12:51:00 PM
I did trick-or-treating from the age of 6 to the age of 11, from the mid-1960s to the early 1970s.  We lived in an isolated neighborhood of about 150 to 175 houses, so you could do a full circuit on Halloween night in just about three hours.

The biggest change to trick-or treating I recall at the time was when candy manufacturers introduced the smaller "fun size" bars, which (as a kid) was a letdown from the full sized candy bars you used to get.

The other thing I liked about trick or treating was that Halloween was always the week after the change back to standard time, which meant it was already dark out by the time you went out trick-or-treating.  Just one more thing today's kids are missing out on.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: Henry on October 22, 2013, 01:41:58 PM
From my childhood in Chicago, I would always dress up as one of the city's sporting icons. Some people I have gone as include Ryne Sandberg, Chris Chelios, Brian Urlacher, Toni Kukoc and, most recently, Jonathan Toews.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: getemngo on October 22, 2013, 01:51:05 PM
Quote from: Brandon on October 20, 2013, 07:06:11 AM
Quote from: allniter89 on October 20, 2013, 12:58:26 AM
I ALWAYS t or t up to age 11 or so, we usually lived on AF bases so it was pretty safe. Now I live waaay out in the stix so no one comes around which is ok with me. Bah humbug! ;-)
Do they still soap windows, tp trees and light bags of poo (pooing is cool) on fire then ring the doorbell? Not that I've ever done any of these, I heard about them from a friend of a friend :bigass: Does Detroit still experience "hell night" Oct 30th?

It's Devil's Night, and sadly, yes.

There is, thankfully, Angels' Night (https://www.detroitmi.gov/DepartmentsandAgencies/AngelsNight.aspx) now, and it's done wonders. There was a 51 percent decrease in Devil's Night arson just from 2010 to 2011. This sign starts showing up on abandoned buildings every October:

(https://www.aaroads.com/forum/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fimg.timeinc.net%2Ftime%2Fdaily%2F2009%2F0910%2F360_devils_night_1029.jpg&hash=828184c8917dfa2210a0b9737018f31780604a62)

Creeps me out, and apparently creeps out some of the vandals too.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: getemngo on October 22, 2013, 01:58:55 PM
Quote from: hbelkins on October 21, 2013, 10:51:43 AM
I live in a rural area, so when I was a kid trick-or-treating was done by car. We only went to houses where people we knew well lived, and there were a few places where special treats always awaited (one former co-worker of my mother's who always fixed popcorn balls for a few select kids).

I'm living at the same place where I grew up. We're in the country, off a main state road in our county but with a long driveway off the road. We haven't had trick-or-treaters since we lived there, and my dad didn't have any for several years prior when he lived there before he went to a nursing home and then died. He always bought candy to give out just in case.

Neat to hear from someone else who grew up in a rural area. Same deal at my house - never had any trick-or-treaters come, not once, but my mom always bought candy just in case.

Most of the country people around me went into town to trick-or-treat, but my family went to a neighborhood surrounding a lake where we had relatives. I've never heard of anyone doing it completely by car. You'd drive to an area where the houses were spaced close together, and then get out and walk around for a couple hours.

I stopped after 6th grade or so. Many of my friends went trick-or-treating again once or twice in high school, but I couldn't be bothered to come up with new costume ideas. I will occasionally go to a haunted house or a party now, though. The parties I attend are lame because less than half the people dress up. I don't.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: hotdogPi on October 28, 2013, 06:35:38 PM
Only 3 days left!
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: jeffandnicole on October 28, 2013, 09:40:55 PM
I do a large Halloween display out front.  I could have the lights flash to music that I transmit from my computer to a preset radio station people can listen to in their crs (such as what I and many others do for Christmas) but I haven't done that for several years now.  There's a few videos on the web of people that use the equipment for their Halloween displays as well.

Ironically, we often aren't home on Halloween to give out candy...so we have this great big display seemingly announcing we are here...and then the kids are completely confused when no one answers the door!
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: Thing 342 on October 28, 2013, 09:52:51 PM
Quote from: Big John on October 21, 2013, 11:20:38 AM
When I lived in suburban Milwaukee, there would be a few vanloads of children who obviously came from the inner city to go trick-or-treating there.
Same thing here. My local newspaper frequently lists my neighborhood as a place to trick-or-treat, so we get a bunch of people from both downtown and other neighborhoods.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: Molandfreak on October 31, 2013, 04:15:30 PM
Maybe I'm just getting cynical, but I am not looking forward to tonight one bit. The dreary weather here might have something to do with it.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: Takumi on October 31, 2013, 04:24:56 PM
Anyone have any plans tonight? Parties, etc.? Some friends and I are having a car meet...I'm going as Al Borland.
(https://fbcdn-photos-e-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash3/1441179_10202214211897986_1993050520_n.jpg)
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: formulanone on October 31, 2013, 05:29:05 PM
Always wondered what folks in rural areas did, thanks for all that. There's always one parent who follows around their kids in a car within a residential suburban neighborhood...help.

I haven't dressed for a Halloween party in about 15 years, sometimes my wife gets stuck at school that night, so usually I just greet the kids with a bucket of candy, and there's always plenty leftover; although I'll pick though my favorites. Kids with no costumes get a single piece.

Quote from: Takumi on October 31, 2013, 04:24:56 PM
Anyone have any plans tonight? Parties, etc.? Some friends and I are having a car meet...I'm going as Al Borland.

I wonder if anyone ever went as Wilson, although I suppose you're really just a fence, two eyes, and a hat.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: Takumi on October 31, 2013, 07:04:48 PM
In Home Improvement's heyday,  the late Earl Hindman, who played Wilson, gave interviews with a miniature fence around his face. I remember he was a guest (as a defense attorney, IIRC) on an episode of Law & Order that was made around the time Home Improvement was winding down (his face was visible, of course), and he was finally "unmasked" in the series finale.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: english si on October 31, 2013, 07:09:06 PM
UK spending at Halloween: 2003 = 3.1m 2013 = 356m

No trick or treaters tonight chez moi.

Saw some premature Diwali (Sunday) / Bonfire Night (Tuesday) fireworks (good that they overlap, rather than a drawn out lots-of-fireworks season), but didn't see any trick-or-treating teenagers out tonight around 8
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: kj3400 on October 31, 2013, 07:19:58 PM
I was going to walk my cousin, but then she found someone to walk with her, so that's out.

I haven't really done Halloween for a long time. Last time I prolly dressed up was in elementary school. I gave out candy one year, but otherwise I don't really do anything. Even now, I'm sitting in front of my computer as I've done every night this week.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: realjd on October 31, 2013, 08:24:06 PM
No trick or treaters this year. I live in a quiet corner of my neighborhood and usually we get a few but most people the past few years have been going to neighborhoods known for good trick or treating (some even barricade the roads) or they go to a "trunk or treat" event. The big moral panic here lately hasn't been poisoned candy or razor blades but sex offenders molestering kids when they answer the door. Because that makes sense and totally happens all the time! Thus, no trick or treaters.

I have heard some fireworks. I'm going to assume it's redneck Brit expats who are starting Guy Fawks celebrations early. Because this is Palm Bay and any Brit expats here are going to be redneck.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: corco on October 31, 2013, 08:27:14 PM
Yeah, it's just getting going here and I can tell it's going to be a busy night of door-answering. My neighbors warned me though so hopefully I bought enough candy.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: 1995hoo on October 31, 2013, 08:49:16 PM
We ran out of candy shortly after 8:00. First time that's happened. So we darkened the front of the house and ate dinner.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: tdindy88 on October 31, 2013, 09:24:48 PM
Here in Indianapolis, the streets are quiet and the lights are dark with no trick-or-treaters anywhere, that's because of this "epic" storm that we are experiencing, and by epic I mean a little windy with some rain (granted over an inch of rain,) but no thunder or lightning anywhere. Therefore, the trick-or-treating is moved to tomorrow night
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: signalman on November 01, 2013, 03:22:43 AM
My roommate was the door man since I was sleeping.  I have an odd sleep schedule because I work odd hours (I sleep from 7 pm-2 am and work from 4:30 am-1 pm)  Anyway, when I got up and was making coffee I checked the candy bowl and it appears to still mostly be full.  The amount of kids we get here varies greatly from year to year.  One year we'll get 2-3 kids, the next we'll get 40.  Apparently this was a year of only a couple.  He and I now have a lot of leftover candy to snack on.
Title: Re: The Halloween Thread
Post by: hotdogPi on November 01, 2013, 02:26:49 PM
Total items:


CANDIES

3 Musketeers 7
Air Heads 1
Almond Joy 4
Butterfinger 4
Crunch 4

Dots 1
Dum-Dums 2
Heath 1

Hershey's 9

Kit Kat 12
Lemonheads 1
Lifesavers Gummies 2
M&Ms 11
Milk Duds 1
Milky Way 14
Mr. Goodbar 2

Nerds 3
Reese's 8

Skittles 5
Snickers 14
Starburst 2
Tootsie Pop 3
Tootsie Roll 6
Twix 19
Twizzlers 2

Welch's Fruit Snacks 1
Whoppers 8


BONUS ITEMS

Iced Animals 1

Smartfood 1
Cheetos 3