Showing posts with label halloween. Show all posts
Showing posts with label halloween. Show all posts

Monday, 21 October 2013

Hallowe'en is coming soon!


Yes, Hallowe'en approacheth! Some get into it more than others!!!! We haven't had kids at our door in 3 years. Fine with me, as Hallowe'en used to lat a week in school. I burned out 25 years teaching!
On our rural drives, On Common Ground Studio Tour, 
we spotted the following fabulous display. It is huge! No cheap blow-up monsters here.
Then, in Mountain.

Party store player
My Frosty!
What was hubby thinking???
Perth

Perth, 2012
My mobile!

Witch cupcakes!
Bancroft law office, 2012!
Bancroft

Monday, 22 October 2012

Hallowe'en from memory lane and in Bancroft

my kids!
Caitlin at her day care
Vomiting pumpkins, or parties. They are ubiquitous. A fun pagan event. It has changed much since I was a kid. Heck, things have changed since my kids were kids!
When I was teaching Ninja Turtles were all the rage.

I travelled through Bancroft last weekend and spotted these on the lawn of a lawyer's office! Not as good as The Grim Reaper in the ER, though. So my nurse friend reports today!
I have dressed Frosty for the month! I sewed his costume myself...




Lots of fun for all! But then there are Hallowe'ens of the more recent past. I went to Ottawa when Caitlin was pregnant! Imagine being invited to your kid's party!


 

Wednesday, 3 October 2012

It's pumpkin time!




Frosty's new outfit!
I made a template from newspaper,
cut out 7 sections , sewed them and
added a piece of green and piece of
the same material as apron ties.
Of course, I had to dress Frosty Snowman for Hallowe'en.

It's only taken me 6 retirement years to embrace Hallowe'en again. It's a fun theme for kids at school. Yes, some religions do not do this theme, and kids were given other activities. Fear is something kids must learn to manage, though, and we had great fun doing group chants, poetry, and word games. (How many words can you name with BOO in them? Can
Pumpkins in the field in 2010.
With our drought of 2012 - they are scarce.
you list more than ten things that are white?)


Aside from the ubiquitous vomiting pumpkins, there are many other designs. I did a quick image search before I started. I was leaning towards painting my pumpkins. It keeps its integrity, you spray on some shellac, and then I can harvest the seeds later. I sketched something on a piece of paper and outside I went. I have been putting an oath out there, to all my painting and truly artistic blog friends, that I was going to learn to paint.

So far, not so much. I am easing closer. I painted two pumpkins!

Fun to paint!
As with all entrepreneurs, you can get your e-Guide to Easy Pumpkin Painting, with instructions, patterns and photos!  Only a $24.77 download! Other places have charity auctions and sell off the painted pumpkins! They
Of course, simple is best!
even paint large, round hay bales and sell these off.
 Pumpkin time!        
I bought a skeleton
-always wanted one!


You can visit haunted barns, many growers do it up for Hallowe'en, with night haunts and walks through spooky places like Saunder's Farm. It employs students, I suppose!


Saturday, 29 October 2011

The great Hallowe'en Debate

Local gas station (Perth) asks you to vote on your fave carving!
I've done my share of Hallowe'en. I've had three children, and taught for 25 years. We had great fun with the day. The grade six classes put together a Hallowe'en room.

With younger kids going through, putting their hand in bowls of brains (cooked spaghetti!), and kids popping out of boxes.

It was clever and creative.
There are pumpkins everywhere. They are beautiful, a sign of fall.



We always had a costume parade throughout the school, especially in the K to gr. 6 schools. It was fun, as the kindergartens visited the older kids.

In a couple of Ontario schools they are forbidding particular costumes; black face, and potentially racist costumes. In all my years teaching I'd never seen kids arriving at school with costumes that mock a particular race or culture. I guess it must happen in this intolerant, red-neck world in some places. (Ohio University’s Students Teaching About Racism in Society)

"Leaf fan waiting for a cup!"
Our Hallowe'en parties were fun, with kids playing music, and telling and listening to spooky stories.
With the new rules barring candy and junk food from schools, I find things have really changed.

I ensured that my young students ate a good snack in the morning, every day. That way, when we had a party, we could let go, and have some junk. It was a treat. I never permitted a student to share anything s/he had brought with another child. This meant that we avoided kids sharing a large bag of chips they'd brought from home, or bought from the store, with their peers. One year I had two anaphalactic kids in my class, with severe allergies to peanuts. We were vigilant.

Nov., 2001
There were a few children, of particular faiths, who were not allowed to participate; e.g., strong Catholic, Jehovah's Witness, Jewish, and Muslim. I truly wrestled with this. I gave them other activities, and they were able to sit in the library reading, or doing other work. Most of us suspended our faith traditions, to have a chance to dress up and be goofy for an afternoon.
It was a day to do role reversal, with ghoulish costumes on otherwise happy kids.

We had great fun.
Lots of integrated phonics and linguistic activities:

  • name 10 things that are white
  • how many words rhyme with 'boo?'
  • name 3 Hallowe'en words with 2, 3 , and 4 syllables.
We usually did group lunches, organized by the students. They might design a placemat in art, put together a menu, and so on.

Boys dressed as girls and girls dressed as boys. We tolerated no racism, or homophobia. 
The teachers always dressed up. 


It is a more complicated world. I am glad I am retired. It is so easy to offend someone.
Some schools are forcing kids to wear 'caring' costumes, or only orange and black.

This year critics have even denounced the Oct. 31 celebration as a conduit for racists. Ohio University’s Students Teaching About Racism in Society launched a poster campaign featuring members of visible minorities glumly holding photos of revellers clad in Pocahontas, suicide-bomber and geisha-girl costumes with the tagline: “This is not who I am and this is not okay.”
 These photos are from October, 2005.
 

  1. Costumes OK in schools, but weapons forbidden


    MetroNews Canada - 2 days ago
    While some Calgary public schools have shelved spooky for “caring” costumes on Hallowe'en, this city has more relaxed rules on students dressing up. ...
  2. What your Hallowe'en costume says about you


    Philippine Star - Anna Canlas - 1 day ago
    Such a statement-making costume is the Octoberian equivalent of a long-strategized trip ... playing even more with the idea of the good and the forbidden...
  3. The war on Hallowe'en: Taming the devils, demons and pumpkins


    National Post - Tristin Hopper - 1 hour ago
    And, while pious Jews may be forbidden from sending their children out trick ... Ore., cancelled the wearing of Hallowe'en costumes for reasons of “equity” ...