Brew Up a Cauldron of Creativity
Quarantine Halloween means crafts and more crafts! Kids can lean to make their own jack o' lantern drawing, paper ghosts, and spider webs from easy-to-find materials at skiptomylou.org. One Halloween tradition is as safe and fun as ever: decorating pumpkins. Parents need to do any carving, of course. Don’t forget to toast the seeds from the pumpkin for a healthy snack, says www.healthychildren.org! Kids can draw silly or spooky faces, glue on yarn to make hair, and paint the pumpkin all different colors.
Cook up Something Creepy-Crawly
While treats are always part of Halloween fun, this year why not let kids cook them up in addition to eating them up? You can make a frightening feast from entrees to desserts. For a delicious first course, serve up these mummy pizzas, with this adorable and easy recipe from Like Mother, Like Daughter, www.lmld.org, a recipe storehouse with so many fun things to make. Then head over to WGBH’s website, www.wgbh.org for “witch fingers” and “spider donuts,” and more. Don’t forget the skeleton snacks, made by dipping pretzel sticks in white chocolate to make bones—“Bone” Appetit!
This Halloween will be unique, but that doesn’t mean it can’t be frighteningly fun if you take this advice. If you’re still hunting for ideas, take a listen to this piece on www.npr.org about what some industrious parents are doing to make this Halloween special—think candy chutes and ziplines. And, no matter the method you choose to deliver candy to trick or treaters this year, PIR hopes the holiday is scary in all the good ways!