Hallowe'en
I think I'm going to make up a bunch of Trick or Treat flyers and post them through doors on this street, on about 26 October. Each house to get one each of "NO TRICK OR TREAT" or "Trick or Treat welcome" - or something. Something about right to stick in the window or on the door.
I really love Hallowe'en and trick or treating, and I hate hate hate the idea of bothering people who don't want to be bothered.
Suggestions for wording or design welcome.
I really love Hallowe'en and trick or treating, and I hate hate hate the idea of bothering people who don't want to be bothered.
Suggestions for wording or design welcome.
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I think I'd go for something a bit gentler than "NO TRICK OR TREAT" for the negative one - maybe just "No trick or treat please" or similar.
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We used to live in such a neighborhood and ever since we have put our "jack" in the front window.
In many neighborhoods it's more common to turn on an outdoor light in front of the house (porch light) if you welcome trick-or-treaters and leave the house darkened if you do not.
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Can you please call it by the 'home' word? I know it's only left in some parts of Scotland & Ireland, but the term is 'guising'.
Are guisers welcome, or not!! ;-)
And that's guisers as in 'disguise'. You put on a 'guise'
The other good thing about Guising, as opposed to Trick or Treating, is that Guisers have to _earn_ their reward. Not expect it.
"The sky is blue, the grass is green, please may I have my Halloween?" is the littlest contribution expected, to earn your treats.
But any song, dance, or piece of poetry will do.
But you have to WORK for it!!!! :-)))))
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/guising
http://krisalis.org/weblog/?p=237
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Edit to add
That came out nasty, sorry, that's not what I intended.
I think that setting up a tradition revival of Guising would be a good idea but it would need much more general education and publicity than I can achieve. I think turning trick-or-treat on this street, maybe ten houses or so, from a tedious menace to an enjoyable costumes-and-singing event is all that I'm able to do, given the broad public perception of trick-or-treat here.
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Lots of people don't like 'trick or treat' as a concept, as they feel it's some new fangled USAn thing. Exlaining it's also 'old fashioned' might help.
Or not. :-)
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(Anonymous) 2009-10-04 10:06 am (UTC)(link)For several years we had eggs thrown at our house and car without the kids even knocking and asking for a treat! One year I even went to the local corner-shopkeeper and asked him not to sell eggs to 'kids' (some of them well into their teens!) who came in wearing Halloween masks, and who were clearly just buying them to throw. He told me if they came in with money they got eggs - it wasn't his business what they did with them! The police who called on him the next day and asked to see his CCTV to see if they could identify the vandals who had littered the streets and 'egged' houses and cars for some distance around, didn't seem to manage to persuade him otherwise! These days we keep the front curtains open on Halloween so at least we can see them coming and maybe stand a chance of identifying any wrongdoers.
Needless to say, I can't help feeling that going out to 'Trick or Treat' in celebration of Halloween is one of the less desirable 'traditions' we've borrowed from the US.
Elaine
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Anyway, our tradition, surely is "Penny for the guy"!
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(Anonymous) 2009-10-04 07:27 pm (UTC)(link)In Morecambe we had mischief night on 4 November, tho I've never come across that anywhere else.
When my kids were little we used to bake Halloween biscuits - witches, bats, etc, dress up, knock on friends doors, make scary noises, then give them the treats - much nicer than begging - tho, of course, we'd always be given something in return.
Last year
(Anonymous) 2009-10-05 07:04 am (UTC)(link)I don't think we knocked at any unwelcoming doors last year (various streets between our house and Layla's as that's where we were heading) - we didn't knock at any that were dark, and mostly knocked at ones that had some sort of pumpkin/spooky sign outside so we could be sure.
asilon