Halloween is almost here! While things are not quite back to normal regarding large gatherings and trick-or-treating, costumes and (especially one with masks!) are still a great way to have some fun with all your fall activities. Have a fun time dressing up around the house or wherever your Halloween and Fall adventures take you with these Portland, Oregon-themed costumes. Remember to practice social distancing but stay together as a pod, you never know what kind of donuts or lumberjacks you might find lurking around these October PDX streets!

Lumberjack or Timber Joey

Tanalee Youngblood via Unsplash

The modern state of Oregon was in many ways built on sawmills, timber, and the logging industry. While the industry was perhaps rightly criticized for its clear cutting of old growth forests in the past, the myth of the lumberjack and our abundance of trees remains one of the enduring symbols of  the state of Oregon. The lumberjack was the mythical cowboy-esque persona of this era and personified in years past by the likes of Paul Bunyan and today by people like Timber Joey, the Portland Timbers “Mascot” who saws off a ring of wood from a tree every time the Timbers score a goal. Conversely, if you’re against the very idea of this, consider going as a tree hugger. The spirit of protest and demonstration is still alive and well in Oregon.

Rain Cloud & Rainbow

This could possibly be the most Portland costume of all time, and it’s a classic that will never go out of style. Get the whole family in on it with individual cloud or raindrop costumes and then designate someone to carry or be a rainbow! You can buy costumes online or get crafty and creative. With a little cotton, colored paper and glue, you’ll have the cutest rainstorm in town.

Blazers or Timbers Fan

Portland loves its Blazers and Timbers. Any real Timbers fan has enough gear to outfit the entire army, so put it to good use! You can make it interactive with pretend axe-chopping your way up and down the street. Or just get your brand new babe an adorable onesie and you’ll have all of the ghosts and ghouls gathered to get a peak.

Little Hippie

Portland may be known for some of its hipster qualities. But there was a time when weirdoes and hippies filled our streets. Evoke the classic Portland hippie in the days of flower power, jam bands, and bell bottoms. Our local Good Will and classic vintage stores are packed with everything that you need. There is no shortage of vintage needs here in Portland! Online shops are also a COVID-safe go-to if you can’t pull some pieces out of the back of your own closet. 

Donut or Biscuit

Portlanders love their donuts! There are plenty of donut outfits you can purchase online. You could even DIY this one at home with some felt. Go all VooDoo and stick real cereal to the costume! Or, if you’re more of a savory person, celebrate your love for Portland’s own Pine State Biscuits. Bonus points for some gravy and fried chicken on top.

Food Truck or Chef

Photo by Amina Filkins from Pexels

Dress up as an ode to your favorite food cart–if your little one is in a stroller, you’ve got a rolling costume! DIY some local favorites like Khao Man Gai, The Grilled Cheese Bus, or others. Or, if you’re a foodie family who watched Top Chef Portland, dress up like your favorite Top chef judge or contestant.

Sasquatch

The mythical Sasquatch usually stays out of view, but this Halloween he just might make an appearance. After 2020, who knows what could happen! Get ready to greet him with your very own sasquatch costume to welcome him to the neighborhood. Or perhaps all the isolation has finally goteen to Sasquatch and he found himself trapped in the world’s only Sasquatch trap, located in Siskiyou National Forest.

Pizza

Portlanders love their pizza. According to one author, Portland even has the best pizza in the country! Dress up like your favorite slice or restaurant and watch out for those who try to eat you! 

Put A Bird On It

This might be the easiest idea for a Portland costume ever! Throw it back to 2011 with a Portlandia-inspired costume—just put a bird on it! Other ideas might include goths, street punks, butchers, and picklers! 

—Levi Rogers

featured image via pexels

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Halloween may look different this year as we remain in a global pandemic, but that doesn’t mean it will be any less fun.

While our kids are at home spending a great deal of time on their Chromebooks, Halloween can be a perfect escape from screen time to give your kids so much needed time enjoying the festive fantasies of Halloween.

Some entertaining Halloween activities to consider are decorating the doors with black and orange paper and draw witches, ghost, and goblins on them. 

A basement, spare bedroom, or living room are perfect places to decorate with creepy crawlers, orange, and black crepe streamers, and a witch pinata. Consider hanging up some sheets to make separate haunted entrances for kids to go around and trick-or-treat.

And, of course, it’s not Halloween without sweet treats to enjoy. Why not make a papiermâché ghostly bowl to store your candy stash? Here is a tutorial to watch to help spark some creative ideas. Include some treats that provide a bit more than just a snack and offer games and activities, later on.

Have some fun creating creepy capsules. Using a little hocus-pocus, you can turn a Halloween colored Easter egg into something Halloween-y! Simply take a permanent marker and draw something spooky on your plastic eggs such as a vampire, pumpkin, or zombie and then have everyone fill their capsule with slime, a fake spider, or gummies to play a trick-or-treat on your family. Continue the fun by playing a game of ‘Guess What’ with your spooky creations. Have each person take turns selecting an egg with their eyes closed and make a guess as to what they have in their hands.

How to Play:

Step 1. Have everyone fill their capsule with something spooky (keeping what’s inside a secret) and put them all out in a line. 

Step 2. One at a time, each person will have to go through and shake the capsules and guess what’s inside.

Step 3. Write your guesses down on a piece of paper (don’t show anyone your answers), and the person with the most answers correct wins the game.

Try some scary stories or fun facts. Share a favorite fun fact or make up a spooky story. Have everyone put ideas in a pumpkin bowl and take turns sharing the fun fact or coming up with a spooky story around the word you pulled out of the pumpkin bowl.

Lastly, end the day by creating a Halloween mask. You’ll need some paper, glue, scissors, elastic, and crayons, and markers. Cut out holes for your eyes and start decorating. Play a game of hide and seek in your new masks and see what characters are hiding around your house!

While Halloween at home is new to all of us, it can certainly be an exciting adventure and a Halloween you’re likely to never forget!

 

 

 

Cynthia Thayer is the Global Chief Marketing Officer of Yowie Group. She has over 25 years of marketing expertise in key areas including brand architecture development, market research, consumer packaged goods advertising across traditional and digital channels, retail and shopper marketing, licensing, toy design and new product development. 

 

Many traditional Halloween activities are being modified or are on hold this year. Even if you are planning on staying in there are many ways to celebrate. DoorDash wants to help make Halloween special especially for those who may need it most — parents. 

Halloween Candy

In a new ‘Dash-oween” survey of 1,000 parents, DoorDash found 84% of parents admit to stealing their kids’ Halloween candy. To help parents treat themselves this year without the highly-awaited candy haul from trick or treating outings this Halloween, DoorDash and Mars Wrigley are partnering to give parents a treat of their own. 

On Halloween, families can get a free “Parents Only” candy bundle exclusively through 16 DoorDash DashMarts, a new type of convenience store by DoorDash offering both household essentials and local restaurant favorites across the country.

Here’s how it works

  • Simply open up your DoorDash app and select DashMart
  • Select your ‘Parents Only’ bundle and check out
  • Use promo code ‘PARENTS” at checkout to get your ‘Parents Only’ candy bundle for free* while supplies last
  • Your order will be delivered to your door – and watch out for your Ding-Dong-Dasher with contactless delivery

DoorDash is also offering customers $5 off a purchase of $20 or more at all DashMarts and any eligible convenience store when they add candy to their cart. The promo will run from October 28 through Halloween (10/31) while supplies last.

The Dash-oween “Parents Only” promotion will be exclusively available in DashMart locations across 16 cities in the US – Chicago, Minneapolis, Columbus, Cincinnati, Dallas, Salt Lake City, the greater Phoenix area, Redwood City, CA, San Diego, Baltimore, Denver, Sacramento, Los Gatos, CA, Houston, Tempe, AZ, and Concord, CA.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: Sarah Gualtieri on Unsplash

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Halloween may look different this year but kids still want to have fun. The Roblox community is here to help. The popular gaming platform is offering a way to have some trick-or-treating fun with a new Halloween Game Sort that includes Halloween specials and a great selection of spooky Halloween-themed games for players of all ages. 

Halloween Roblox

The top Roblox games like Ghost Simulator, Field Trip Z, Roblox High School 2, and ZombieRush include a variety of Halloween-themed challenges and twists. For example, in ZombieRush players can earn a special badge for eliminating pumpkin-headed zombies, which also helps them earn an exclusive new weapon, or maybe they’d rather hop into Ghost Hunt to get some special awards in exchange for captured ghosts.

In addition, iD Tech, one of Roblox’s preeminent education partners and leaders in youth STEM education, is hosting a Halloween Block Party Oct. 30 through Nov. 1 on the Roblox platform. In their exclusive game created for the party (going live Mon., Oct. 26th) players between the age of 7-17 can participate in virtual trick or treating challenges and explore Halloween activities including a corn maze, hayride, and haunted house.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: Roblox 

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To trick-or-treat, or not to trick-or-treat? That is the question for Halloween 2020. While we many of us don’t know “the plan” yet (didn’t school just start??) that doesn’t mean Halloween will be a nightmare! With a full moon and a Saturday calendar date, there are lot’s of alternatives (or additions) to trick-or-treating. Here are  15 wonderfully wicked ways to celebrate.

Go on a Ghost Tour...from Home

Loftus Hall courtesy Visit New Ross

Haunted Irish castles, spooky library ghost cams, and live walking tours all await you this season. Check out this lineup of places to get your scare on from the comfort of your own couch. 

Go Trunk-or-Treating

trunk-or-treat ideas
Lylees

Trunk-or-treating has been growing in popularity the last few years, especially for younger kids. You can even buy Halloween trunk decor online.  Essentially, a group of families decorate their cars and kids can trick-or-treat from trunk to trunk. Groups typically use a larger parking lot. Here are 16 spooktacular ideas to try it yourself. Be sure to practice social distancing with candy distribution especially, rather than handing candy out directly to kids. 

Social Distanced Candy Distribution

Kristina Paukshtite via Pexels

If you and your neighborhood/neighbors feel comfortable with a version of trick-or-treating this year, you can place candy at the end of a driveway or edge of your yard/bottom stoop and let kids take turns trick-or-treating while maintain social distance. Wear a cute Halloween face mask to keep safe and in the spirit of things. And if all else fails, you can make this amazing social distance candy slide

Stay in for a Scary Movie Night

Halloween jokes
Lukas Niescioruk via Unsplash

Pop up the popcorn and whip up a few festive treats (or a big bowl of Halloween candy), don your costumes and cue up a kids Halloween movie marathon. We love this list of not-too-spooky movies from Common Sense Media. Here's all the gear that's you'll need

Plan a Dramatic, Spooky Dinner

The Foodie and the Fix

Dress up in your finest costumes and set your table with decor worthy of the Addams Family, then serve up one or more of these healthy, festive Halloween meals. Make sure you linger over dessert and tell a spooky story or two, and perhaps sing along with few Halloween songs while cleaning up. 

Plan a Wicked Family Game Night

Disney Haunted Mansion Game
Funko Games

There are more "spooky" themed games out now than ever. In fact, our editor found 12 different board games perfect for Halloween night and suitable for ages toddler and up! Check them out here

Throw a Monster Dance Party

Jessica Rockowitz via Unsplash

Do the mash! Get your Halloween vibes going, put on your creepy attire and dance. With Halloween on a Saturday this year, if the weather permits you can even have an outdoor Monster Mash "party" with dance stations marked at 6 ft. (or more) apart. You'll just need costumes, big speakers, and this wicked-cool playlist

Set Up a Mini Pumpkin Hunt

Ryan Christodoulou

Think like the Easter Bunny this Halloween and hide some mini pumpkins and maybe even candy treats around your house, yard, or neighborhood. Adapt this idea to your kid's ages and how much space you have. Toddler? Keep it small (and repeat). Live in an apartment? Do it indoors! If your kids are older, you can suggest they help hide mini pumpkins around the neighborhood for the littler kids. Send out an announcement to let families know you've hidden little pumpkins (one mini per hunter). 

Similarly, you can do a scavenger hunt around your house/'hood. Try an app like Goosechase for help planning an easy one yourself. 

Happy Halloween Car Parade

Mariamichelle via Pixabay

Organize a car parade! Trick out your car in festive decor, put on your costumes (here are some of our favorite Etsy costumes) roll down your windows and hit the town. This one is best to organize in advance and plan an easy route where other kids can see. You can even have the kids stay at home to see the parade and let one of the grown ups head out in a freaked out car. Consider a monster-worthy "car show" too, where decorated cars can be parked in a lot (like a large school parking lot) several feet apart and kids can drive through or walk through to see the decor. 

A Very Witchy Outdoor Story Time

Valeria Boltneva via Pexels

Host an outdoor story time! There are so many wonderful Halloween reads, get a stack going, put on your best witch hat and scare up a group of families to listen in. Families can spread out in a park, or even a yard, with lots of space in between and keep your Halloween face masks handy. Designate family spots with a pumpkin where they can put down chairs or a blanket. 

Thow an (Outdoor) Pumpkin Decorating Party

Halloween happenings, Things to do
iStock

If the weather is right, you can have a small pumpkin carving or decorating party in an outdoor space. Set the stations up in advance following social distance guidelines with any supplies: if carving, tools or use paints or other decorating items. If you're feeling really ambitious, you can prep the pumpkins in advance and print out templates or try one of these amazing no-carve ideas

If you aren't able or aren't comfortable doing this with a small group of kids, you can still do it with your own kids. Even if you do this every year, make sure this year it's a bit more festive and a bigger deal. 

(Virtual) Pumpkin Run

Diogo Araújo via Pexels

Trail-running through a local apple orchard or around your favorite park with 75 of your closest friends may be well off the table this year, but why not start a new tradition with the kids with a virtual Pumpkin Run, like this one? It's a great way to get that PE fix and enjoy the fall air. Plus, you can run in a costume if you want and the added accountability of logging your time online is a great motivator. Never done a 5k (let alone with kids)? Check out these tips for getting started. 

Host a Virtual Costume Contest

Patricia Prudente via Unsplash

Throw a Zoom party where each kid and family gets a chance to show off their costumes. Have "prizes" designated for different categories: Best Group Costume, Funniest, Most Realistic, Most Unique, Best Superhero, etc. 

Yard Decor Contest

Lowe's

This might be the year you finally buy one of those giant Halloween yard inflatables! Get your neighbors in on the fun, and encourage everyone to decorate their yards. Create small paper invites and put them in people's mailboxes, letting them know the date of the competition, so they have plenty of time to get ready! On the day of, hop in your car (or on your bikes) and ride around to "judge" the houses. Make sure to include window-decor for anyone who lives in an apartment or doesn't have a yard. Have a few cool prizes ready, like gift cards or pumpkins or even a handmade ribbon. If you don't want the pressure of judging, get people to vote through a google form or Surveymonkey. Categories can include: Scariest, Friendliest, Strangest, Best Window, Best Door, etc. 

Scarecrow Competition

dsdinternational; via Pixabay

As with the yard idea above, organize a Scarecrow Competition. Let people know in advance when the "judging" will take place, to allow kids time to make the best scarecrow they can. Make sure it's placed in an easy-to-see spot at the designated time and then check them all out on bike or car. If you want to include people from other places beyond your town, make it virtual and have everyone submit a photo! Prizes can be honorary or virtual. 

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Is Halloween Cancelled?

Photo: © Ariel Skelley—DigitalVision/Getty Images

Short answer—no, Halloween has not been canceled. COVID-19 hasn’t stopped stores from stocking their shelves with huge bags of candy and other Halloween products. But many parents are still wondering if trick-or-treating and other Halloween traditions will be safe this year.

Health Guidelines

Public health agencies are urging caution and offering a mixed bag of recommendations. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends low-risk activities such as carving pumpkins. Advice from the American Academy of Pediatrics emphasizes good Halloween hygiene and recommends that families should avoid large gatherings, maintain a distance of six feet from others, wear cloth face coverings, and wash hands frequently. The information from local public health agencies has been inconsistent. For example, the Los Angeles County Department of Health announced in early September that Halloween trick-or-treating will not be allowed, then, just a few days later, the county changed their guidelines to state that trick-or-treating is simply “not recommended.” The primary health concerns specific to trick-or-treating they cited are social distancing—the difficulty of staying six feet apart when children gather and go door-to-door—and the potential touching and sharing of Halloween candy.

Help from Candy Companies

Candy companies, however, have been proactively providing families with information and ideas for a safe and fun Halloween. Hershey has created an interactive website featuring a map showing COVID-19 risk levels by county so families can make informed decisions about Halloween activities. Mars, the makers of Snickers and M&Ms, launched a trick-or-treating app that will allow users to redeem virtual candy credits for real candy. Emily Oster, author of Cribsheet: A Data-Driven Guide to Better, More Relaxed Parenting, from Birth to Preschool and cofounder of COVID Explained, a website providing data-driven resources for parents and families, suggests that trick-or-treating, from an epidemiological perspective, may still be an appropriate choice for some families. Oster states that for this outdoor activity, if people wear face masks and the adults make an effort to maintain social distancing, “the data indicates the risk of their spreading Covid-19 is fairly low.” While Oster points out that the virus does not survive well on surfaces, she suggest that those giving out candy should not use a large communal bowl. Spread out the treats on your steps or porch so each trick-or-treater touches only one.

What Are Your Priorities?

Making Halloween plans during a global pandemic requires that we rethink our priorities. Talk with your child and other family members about what they enjoy most about Halloween. Dressing up in costumes? Eating candy? Spending time with family and friends? Scaring ourselves or others with spooky stories and decorations? Try to focus on just one or two priorities, and use these to shape your plans.

Each family must also assess their unique risk factors regarding COVID-19. Do you live in an area where the numbers are high? Are any members of your family more vulnerable, such as older adults or those with medical conditions like asthma? If so, your Halloween plans may look quite different this year.

Alternatives to Trick-or-Treating

Trick-or-treating is not the only spooky way to get candy. Here are just a few creative ideas for Halloween activities.

1. Drive-By Events: Many communities offer drive-thru Halloween events, such as Halloween at the Park in Jamesville, New York. Families stay inside the safety of their cars as they drive by Halloween displays. If a formal event is not available in your community, consider driving by a local cemetery or other spooky site while listening to Halloween music.

2. Halloween Trails: Halloween trails are like outdoor haunted houses. Many park districts and public libraries create family-friendly Halloween trails with spooky displays and decorations. Or head out to the country for a walk through a haunted corn maze. Check for listings in your area.

3. Indoor Candy Hunt: If you’re staying indoors for Halloween, a candy hunt is a fun alternative to trick-or-treating. Gather a collection of wrapped candy and hide the pieces around the house (no peeking!). For little ones, hide the candy in more obvious spots, such as under a pillow on the couch. Older children may be up for more challenging hiding places, like behind a light fixture. Pro tip—count the candies before you hide them, so you’ll know when all the pieces have been found.

4. Candlelight Ghost Stories On Halloween night, gather around the flickering light of a candle or fireplace and tell or read some spooky stories. Young children enjoy silly tales like Dr. Seuss’s pale green pants in What Was I Scared Of? For older children, we recommend a collection such as A World Full of Spooky Stories: 50 Stories to Make Your Spine Tingle by Angela McAllister.

Sources

American Academy of Pediatrics, “American Academy of Pediatrics Offers Tips for a Safe Halloween During Pandemic,” 2020 Center for Disease Control and Prevention, “ Holiday Celebrations,” 2020 Corn Mazes America Gasparro, Annie, “Hershey Maps Trick-or-Treating Risks in Hopes Coronavirus Won’t Scare Off Halloween Sales,” 2020 Guarino, Ben, Achenbach, Joel, “Virus ‘Does Not Spread Easily’ from Contaminated Surfaces or Animals, Revised CDC Website States,” 2020 Halloween at the Park Hershey, “Halloween 2020,” 2020 Kiner, Deb, “Trick or Treat Is Virtual in M&M/Mars ‘Treat Town’ but the Candy Is Real,” 2020 Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, “Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19): Guidance for Celebrating Halloween,” 2020 Mars Wrigley, “Treat Town Halloween,” 2020 Moon, Sarah, Holcombe, Madeline, and Mossburg, Cheri, “Los Angeles Backtracks on Coronavirus Trick-or-Treat Ban This Halloween,” 2020 Oster, Emily, “COVID-19 Doesn’t Have to Cancel Halloween,” 2020 Oster, Emily, Cribsheet: A Data-Driven Guide to Better, More Relaxed Parenting, from Birth to Preschool, 2019

Learn More

Fenn, Mike, “Ten Ways to Enjoy Halloween from the Comfort of Your Own Home,” 2020 Morrison, Leslie, “Data-Driven Parenting in the Age of COVID-19,” 2020 VanSchmus, Emily, “11 Festive Ways to Spend Halloween at Home Instead of Trick-or-Treating,” 2020

 

Britannica For Parents
Tinybeans Voices Contributor

We’re living in a time when it’s nearly impossible to distinguish fact from fiction. Parents need information they trust to help them make good decisions about raising their curious learners. Britannica for Parents provides safe and credible resources to empower all kids and parents and inspire curiosity for generations to come.

It’s time to get the kids prepped for Halloween. While the holiday may look different this year, 1-800-FLOWERS.COM,Inc. is helping families to stay connected to make the most of the day. From socially distanced trick-or-treating to no-contact gifting there are endless ways to celebrate. 

Harry & David Halloween Pear Decorating Kit ($34.99): A fun and creative new way to enjoy a fruit alternative as a Halloween treat, this unique and sweet Halloween Pear Decorating Kit comes complete with a sheet of food-safe stickers. Once completed these pears are perfect to use as Halloween décor. 

Harry & David Halloween Pear Decorating Kit

The Popcorn Factory Halloween Popcorn Ball Decorating Kit ($39.99): Play with your food! This kit includes everything you’ll need to fashion ghosts, goblins, witches, bats, pumpkins, monsters, spiders, bats or anything else your imagination can create using eight popcorn balls.

The Popcorn Factory Halloween Popcorn Ball Decorating Kit

Cheryl’s Cookies Halloween Cut-Out Cookie Decorating Kit ($49.99-$79.99): A delicious and fun gift idea! The cut-out cookie kit arrives with everything you need to create yummy buttercream frosted Cheryl’s treats at home – no baking necessary. The kit includes 24 unfrosted, cut-out cookies, a 1 lb. tub each of vanilla and orange icing and Halloween sprinkles. If you choose, you can add aprons and a spatula. 

Cheryl’s Cookies Halloween Cut-Out Cookie Decorating Kit

This year, Halloween activities for kids are definitely not cancelled!

—Jennifer Swartvagher

All photos courtesy of 1-800-FLOWERS.COM

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Even if your Halloween looks different this year, KIDZ BOP is making sure that families still have a spook-tacular time celebrating at home. The music brand is kicking off the season with a bunch of treats for your very own at home KIDZ BOP Halloween Party, including a brand-new Halloween album, an at-home boo-tacular Halloween partnership with Chuck E. Cheese, an eight-hour YouTube livestream event hosted by the KIDZ BOP Kids on Halloween day, crafts and activities on Pinterest and much more.

KIDZ BOP Halloween

  • Families can begin their celebrations at home by dancing and singing along to KIDZ BOP’s newest album with a special glow in the dark album cover, KIDZ BOP Halloween Party!, featuring “Spooky Scary Skeletons,” “Monster Mash,” and KIDZ BOP’s newest original song, “Halloween Party!”
  • Rock out to KIDZ BOP Halloween music videos to “Spooky Scary Skeletons” (out Oct. 2) and KIDZ BOP’s Original Song “Halloween Party!” (out Oct. 9) on YouTube. 
  • The KIDZ BOP 2021 album is out Oct. 23rd, featuring 22 family-friendly versions of today’s biggest hits, including Rain On Me, Blinding Lights, and Savage Love.
  • On Halloween day, Sat., Oct. 31, the KIDZ BOP Kids will host an eight-hour livestream on their YouTube Channel – helping families have the ultimate at-home KIDZ BOP Halloween party – all day long. The livestream will feature all of KIDZ BOP’s best Halloween music videos, dance alongs, and favorite Halloween moments and tips from the KIDZ BOP Kids
  • Check out KIDZ BOP’s Pinterest board here for KIDZ BOP-themed Halloween activities, including a DIY pop star costume, DIY edible headphones and drumsticks, music playlists, videos, and more!

KIDZ BOP and Chuck E. Cheese have teamed up to help families create the ultimate at-home Boo-tacular Halloween party. From now through Oct. 31, carry-out and delivery specials at participating Chuck E. Cheese locations will include a spook-tacular KIDZ BOP activity sheet and glow in the dark temporary tattoos. Throughout the promotion, families can visit KIDZBOP.com/Halloween to safely order carry-out or delivery, and enjoy Halloween entertainment from Chuck E. Cheese and the KIDZ BOP Kids, including KIDZ BOP music, videos and DIY at home party activities.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: KIDZ BOP

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Trick-or-treating is tons of fun, but there’s more than one way for families to celebrate Halloween in Portland. If your family takes this beloved holiday seriously, you are going to want to keep reading! We’ve come up with a list of indoor events that will thrill you little ghosts and goblins. Read on for our favorite picks.

Halloween at the Portland Children’s Museum

Evelyn Cirignotta

On Halloween day bring your little animals, monsters, witches, superheroes, or ballerinas to the Portland Children’s Museum for a special quest!  Kids will Trick-or-treat to each exhibit and have the opportunity to participate in a spookily fun art project or slimy sensory experience. Museum staff will be handing out candy-free goodies like glow sticks, hand-made Halloween buttons, and toys for a perfectly marvelous sugar-free Halloween that everyone can enjoy! This happens on October 31 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. If you already have plans mark your calendar for October 28th  for a playful, festive, and NOT-SO-SCARY evening of Halloween fun at the museum. Note: this is for members only. Kids can  trick-or-treat in the exhibits for candy, stickers, pencils and more, decorate Trick-or-Treat bags, and have fun with glow-in-the-dark painting!  
Oct. 28, 5:30 –7:30 p.m.
Oct. 31, 10:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m.

Free for members, $11/non-members

4015 SW Canyon Road
503-223-6500
Online: portlandcm.org

Portland's Aerial Tram Halloween Ride

xflickrx via Flickr

Wear your witch's hat but leave the broomstick at home! Portland’s Aerial Tram will do the flying for you. Expect a day of frightful and delightful family activities, including face painting and Halloween arts and crafts for kids, and TRAM rides. Kids under 6 ride free with a fare-paying adult.

Oct 26, 11:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m.
3303 SW Bond Ave.
Portland, OR 97239
Online: gobytram.com

Kennedy School TRICK-OR-TREATING!

Jesse Michael Nix

On Halloween Day from 4:30 p.m. until 10 p.m. you can take your kids to the halls of the Kennedy School for Trick-or Treating adventures, dinner out, live performances, and so much more! It’s free for everyone and all ages are welcome. Dinner is not included but we recommend you stay and feed those little cute monsters… or else. Starting at 4:30 p.m. there’s a Willamette Radio Workshop in the Kennedy School Theater. Trick-or-Treating begins at 4:30 p.m. and ends at 6:30 p.m. all throughout the Kennedy School Halls. If you’re feeling the energy stay a bit longer for a live musical performance from the Coastline! Click here to see some images from last year’s fun filled event!

Free for Everyone
Oct. 31, 4 - 10p.m.
5736 N.E. 33rd Ave
503-249-3983
Online: mcmenamins.com

Story Slam: Halloween Edition at Beaverton Library

San José Public Library

Get in the Halloween Spirit with a spooky storytime slam at the Beaverton Library! Tell or listen to a story based on the themes “Trick or Treat” and “Spooked, Frightened, or just Plain Scared.” Beaverton City Library's Story Slam is a friendly, open-mic storytelling competition. Potential storytellers will put their names in a hat; names will be picked from the hat and those chosen will take to the stage to tell their true, personal, 5 to 8-minute story. You and your kids can put your names in the hat to tell a story or just attend to enjoy the show! Stories must be told from memory. The winner receives a $10 gift certificate to The Book Corner. This program is free and open to the public; recommended for ages 13 and up. Potential storytellers should arrive 15 minutes early to speak with the event host about their planned story.

Oct. 30, 7 – 8:30 p.m. 
12375 SW 5th St, Beaverton
503-350-3600
Online: beavertonlibrary.org

Halloween Party and Open Gym at the Playground Gym

Sarah S. via yelp

Experience a fun-filled Halloween Party along with an open gym. The Playground Gym will have their space full of fun equipment and mats and will provide crafts, games, story time with a princess, a fire dancing performance, and more. Costumes more than welcome. 

Oct. 31
3-6 p.m.
$8 for 1 child, $12 for 2, $15 for 3
5215 N Lombard St.

More info here.

Halloweek Arts at Smartypants

smarty pants via yelp

Have a not-so-spooky time at this Halloween event. For the entire week leading up to—and on—Halloween, your kids can get crafty at Smarty Pants. They'll enjoy getting creative while waiting to hit the streets to trick-or-treat.

Oct.25-31
9 a.m. - 6 p.m.
5512 N Montana Ave.
Event details here.

—Annette Benedetti

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It’s the spookiest time of the year and we’ve got the full scoop on all the Halloween activities, events and things to do for kids going on around Austin. From trick-or-treating to some awesome pumpkin patches, there’s plenty to fill up all the upcoming fall weekends. Get your fall on!

photo: daniel.baker via flickr

Dark Harvest Halloween
Creepy scarecrows, ghost stories, haunted trails, pumpkin carving and more will be showcased in Austin’s biggest family-friendly Halloween festival, with live music, food and Scream Street activities. Pioneer Farms. Oct. 18-19, 25-27, 31. Event details

Rosita Y Conchita
In this imaginative adaptation of Erich Haeger and Eric Gonzalez’s award-winning children’s book, two sisters try to reunite on the Day of the Dead. Along the way Rosita keeps getting lost, but she miraculously finds her way to Conchita through familiar sounds and images. This touching story comes to life with son jarocho music by Son Armado, professional actors, and puppetry, All ages will delight in the rhyming bilingual dialogue and stunning images. Austin Scottish Rite Theater. Oct. 12-13, 20, 26-27, Nov. 2. Event details

Halloween Carnival and Haunted House
Be there at Metz Recreation Center for Halloween games, costume contest, trunk-or-treat, music, snacks, door prizes and haunted house. Game tickets are 25 cents each and the haunted house is $1. Metz Recreation Center. Oct. 17. Event details

Trunk or Treat for Special Needs Kids
A family-centered event, it encourages active participation for children with various disabilities or limitations. Trick-or-treat from car to car, trunk to trunk. Costumes encouraged. Bring your trick or treat bags. Seton Medical Center Williamson. Oct. 19. Event details.

Ghost Tours on the Square
Ghost Tours on the Square are hosted by the Williamson Museum. Later tours will be scarier than those held earlier in the evening. Purchase tickets at the Williamson Museum or by phone at 512-943-1670. Williamson Museum. Oct. 25-26. Event details. 

photo: Tom Kelly via Flickr

The Pumpkin Express
The Pumpkin Express takes you to the sleepy town of Bertram where you will step off for 30 minutes to pick a pumpkin from the Depot Pumpkin Patch. Kids of all ages will enjoy a chat with Farmer Brown, take a tour of our historic 1912 train depot and sip apple cider. So pack a snack and jump on board! Austin Steam Train – Cedar Park. Oct. 27. Event details

Boo Bash
The 9th Annual Boo Bash, hosted by The Downtown Georgetown Association, is a family-friendly trick-or-treat event around Georgetown’s historic town square. Adults and children are encouraged to dress in costume and participate in “Trunk or Treat.” Georgetown Town Square. Oct. 27. Event details

—Kate Loweth

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