View Full Version here: : Halloween - did any kids come to your front door ?
Ian Robinson
03-11-2009, 12:43 AM
Last several years there have been kids dressed up as scary things coming around with their big siblings or under the watchful eyes of mum or dad , and most year's we've forgotten to have some treats to give them.
This year we stocked up and no kids came , least wize none on Saturday avo when we got home.
Dammit..:sadeyes:.. nothing for it but to eat the snakes, freddos, smarties, coles party mix and jelly beans ourselves as we've got stacks of them.
(Can't resist them as my wife and both have sweet tooths and we don't usually have such yummy stuff in the pantry except at Xmas / NY and they wont last that long.)
Nesti
03-11-2009, 12:45 AM
LOL, I bought a tonne of lollies, then found out we were going out to dinner...forgot to leave them outside too.
citivolus
03-11-2009, 01:51 AM
We had 1 group of 6 kids come by, which is the least we have seen in the last 5 years.
dpastern
03-11-2009, 07:24 AM
Yes, 2 teenage boys, one dressed up.
Dave
Only one lot came to my door, my two dogs did their very best Halloween Hounds of Hell impersonation from just behind the screen door before they had even knocked..... next sound we heard was a small shriek and running across our gravel driveway! Quite funny actually...
jjjnettie
03-11-2009, 08:52 AM
We had one group of 9 kids turn up. All dressed up, Mum was waiting on the curb.
I had heaps of lollies in the cupboard and they took the lot.
They went to a lot of effort with the costumes too.
I had two lots of kids. Two young kids with their dad, and a little bit later three older kids. I didn't have any lollies (was out at a wedding all day as their photographer so I had other things on my mind!) but I did have a bunch of mini chocolate bars (milky ways, snickers etc.) in the fridge so I could give away something :)
multiweb
03-11-2009, 09:20 AM
Couple but not as many as last year. :shrug: I had heaps of lollies left over... and I'm on a diet so I can't eat them :sadeyes:
casstony
03-11-2009, 09:30 AM
We weren't home. We took our kids to a friends place where the neighbourhood has an organized event; all the households know the kids are coming and the kids don't have to deal with disappointment. I could take or leave it, but the kids get a kick out of dressing up.
AstralTraveller
03-11-2009, 11:06 AM
None this year. Don't know if there were any in the neighbourhood. Perhaps we are known as tight*****.
There was a story on Macca about a bloke who didn't have any lollies so he gave the kids Qwikeze and Strepsils. :rolleyes: I'm sure the kids said :thanx:.
TrevorW
03-11-2009, 11:58 AM
Yes and I threw eggs out them, scared the shietts out of the little buggers
Enchilada
03-11-2009, 12:54 PM
I just told the parents, who were waiting out side, the should be absolutely ashamed of themselves. Halloween is a mixture of paganism, those disgustingly sick Saw (pick you number) movies, and blatant commercialism. Not something for the faint of heart. Americanism gone rampant in a country on the other side of the world. That's my opinion.
Outbackmanyep
03-11-2009, 01:02 PM
To answer you in short NO....but it was good cos it saved me wasting water!
DavidU
03-11-2009, 01:12 PM
That's what I would do!
Nesti
03-11-2009, 02:34 PM
Get them to sign a waiver, you're not responsible for their Diabetes.
Nesti
03-11-2009, 02:38 PM
Didn't really think of it like that, but you have a point. But we've had Halloween here since before I was born.
Imagine if some idiot tried to introduce Thanks Giving here.
multiweb
03-11-2009, 02:46 PM
:lol: You're a cranky man mate! It's just a bunch of kids who will ring any bell for lollies. Don't read too much into things. :thumbsup:
Ian Robinson
03-11-2009, 02:56 PM
Sure it's not strickly an aussie custom, but then it does no harm, and all kids love dressing up and playing monsters, witches, demons, zombie, vampires and the like.
Heck I've been going to Hallowene parties (at square dancing) since the mid 1970s .... halls decked out in pretend cobwebs, coffins, black stuff and black lights , and the callers and dancers often going to great efforts to dress the part even with costumes and goulish makeup on. Great fun is always had by all , and it's a very family orientated night.
I think it's a bit much teenagers and kids who are older than 9 or 10 asking for lollies at the door , but little kids I have no problems with doing this.
If I still had little kiddies , I'd be happy for them do this , so long my wife or I were nearby and could keep an eye on them and they only visited houses of people who we knew and never crossed the freshhold.
I'd probably raid their booty bags while they were asleep or at school too ....
Anything that brings a community local closer together (and the kids are usually the vector for this in my experience) is a good thing.
I'd rather the kids know my wife and I and be on friendly terms with them and their parents , than be a stranger. I like the sounds of kids having fun and playing.
Enchilada
03-11-2009, 06:17 PM
Maybe. It's what I think, and have done so for ages.
I love my own country of Australia, and I don't like to see our culture supplanted for another - no matter where or who it is.
Nothing personal.
I agree - all countries should ensure the preservation of their cultures.
But at the same time, it's naive to think that ones' country will not be influenced somewhat by the barrage of foreign media and television. And with the advent of the Internet, which has a strong US culture, the kids of today will only become more and more American.
Lumen Miner
03-11-2009, 09:42 PM
Hey where do you live? I'd love to egg you next year.
"Believe in the wattle" OMG That's your cultural fall back?
How 'bout respecting the 50,000 years worth of culture already existant here, prior to our invasion. I would assume by your patriotic nature, your ancestors arrived on the first convict ships, as mine? What specific Australiana cultures have they developed, that we can be proud of / celebrate? That is apart from "the wattle" :rofl: .
renormalised
03-11-2009, 10:54 PM
Enchilada....lighten up!!!!
Might come as a great surprise to you but "Halloween" is loosely based on an ancient seasonal festival that for some 70% of our population is a part of our cultural history....ever heard of Samhain. I'd go into the particulars of the rites associated with Samhain but I'd doubt you'd be interested.
renormalised
03-11-2009, 11:38 PM
What to do about kids trick or treating???....give them lollies:P:D
Or scare the bejeezes out of them:P:P:D:D
As for Australians not being Celtic or having links as such...53% of our population can claim Irish ancestry and then you have whatever percentage has Scottish, English and Welsh...not bad for a country of 22 million.
We are Australian guys, I turn them away, there is enough American junk on Telly, why support this stupid crap.
Leon
Yes....we are Australian, but that doesn't mean we have to be so insular as to be xenophobic.
There is absolutely no reason to believe that by celebrating things like Halloween that our own traditions are going to be 'swamped' or completely wiped from the calendar.
Honestly, why is it that whenever we have these sorts of discussions we always end up with some all-or-nothing line of logic which dictates that any recognition of the traditions and values of another culture will come at the expense of our own!!
Are our own traditions so fragile...that to welcome others will see our own dissipate on the breeze like confetti? Are we really that delicate?
Honestly....
Matt, no mate we are not delicate to other traditions, and i, as probably you, welcome all traditions, of all nations, I am not against any particular day off, or special day for any culture, but it seems that the U.S rules in what happens, even to our dollar value.
And you know what, they, the States are not that good at it.
We don't celebrate any other countries special day, so why America.
Leon :thumbsup:
Leon...
You're kidding, right?
'Australians' celebrate all sorts of days throughout the year which are 'foreign' in origin. And it's not as if Halloween has become an Aussie public holiday or anything.
I'm not sure what to say about the comment about the US dollar. Its impact is felt throughout the world and is a reflection of their economic power, notwithstanding the GFC!:lol:
I guess that's the way it is when you historically are one of the world's economic powerhouses.
Octane
04-11-2009, 01:34 AM
Enchilada,
I take it you don't have very many friends. What, with the charming and holier-than-thou attitude.
Grow up.
Enchilada
04-11-2009, 03:03 AM
I don't like the idea Halloween, plain and simple. I have strong feelings about it, and it seems other people do too.
If that means I "don't have very many friends." So be it.
Bless you, Octane! :rofl:
Calibos
04-11-2009, 03:08 AM
Someone mentioned Thanksgiving. I have to agree. Some guys here are making out that Aussies celebrating Halloween is akin to them celebrating the Colonisation of North America. Halloween isn't an American Special Day. Its an Irish Special Day that was imported to America by Irish immigrants and over commercialised in the last 40 years by Americans in the main. With so much Irish ancestry in Aussie blood why is it 'foreign' for aussies to celebrate it too.
At the risk of this veering into religious territory, I note that one poster mentioned berating the parents and telling them they should be ashamed at celebrating a 'Pagan' festival. Sounds like something an evangelical Christian would say. Ironic that Evangelical Christianity is an import to Australia from.....the good 'ol U.S of A :D
multiweb
04-11-2009, 08:26 AM
:lol: for god sake guys, listen to yourselves! We're talking about kids having a ball knocking on doors for lollies once a year. No more no less. And you carry on about attacks on your culture? You're full of it. :rofl::rofl::rofl:The kids are more mature than you are.
Ian Robinson
04-11-2009, 11:10 AM
Well me matey, I remember when I was a kiddy in infants and primary school being taught the maypole dance .... that was in the 1960s.
I remember cracker night , 1960s and 1970s.
I've gone to and celebrated Octoberfest (that's a german tradition).
Been to greek weddings and muslim weddings.
I also remember mum and dad taking the family to Sydney to watch and join in the celebrating of the chinese new year when I was kid.
Heck I took up American Square Dancing when I discovered there were lots of teenage girls doing it when I was about 14 yo, and I also did ballroom and latin dance (same reasons) and took up highland dancing too as I fancied a girl who also did that. None of the above make me any less australian than someone who followed this or that code of football and cricket (neither of which I've ever been much interested in). I still do the square dancing (though I've had a break from it since my local caller retired and closed down my favourite club a couple of years ago) and my masters' (lectures at night) got in the way.
My parents are of highland / norse (MacDonald on mum's side) and anglo-saxon on dad's side decent.
Takes hundreds of years to develop a unique culture , if you exclude aboriginal culture , we haven't haven't had sufficient time to do this.
Really when it comes down to it, what traditions that are celebrated here are strictly Australian (if you exclude aboriginal traditions) ?
Hallowene is just a fun day and evening , and a good excuse to have a party and to act silly and even get dressed up if that takes your fancy which happens to have ancient celtic origins , just like easter and xmas , and many other christian festivals (for those who happen to be practicing christians or believers). No harm in it apart for the kids (and parents) having a sugar high, risking a bit of tooth decay or putting a pound or two on).
Interesting to read the strong opinions on both sides. This implies to me that there is no obvious right or wrong standpoint in the situation.
For what it's worth, I prefer not to celebrate Halloween in New Zealand, since we have the pleasure of celebrating the British festival of Guy Fawkes on the 5th of November every year. Perhaps if Halloween were at a different time of year, I would consider it.
Calibos
05-11-2009, 01:08 AM
If anyone has a right to complain about Halloween its the English. Its starting to get as big as Guy Fawkes Night over there. As an Irish guy in Ireland, even I can see that, that must annoy some English people. In that case, a foreign tradition is starting to supplant a local one. However if there is no supplanting going on I don't see the problem. ie. if historically the Ausies didn't celebrate anything between OCT 31st and NOV 5th, well then why not celebrate, one or the other or both. In the case of NZ, if they already celebrate Guy Fawkes, I might understand some grumbling if everyone started celebrating Halloween instead.
However, even if I was one of those people who were a little miffed at a cherished tradition being supplanted, I still wouldn't be grumpy 'ol so and so and tell the kids to 'Get orf my land!!' :D
I have never let my children "celebrate" Halloween, and I have no intention of encouraging others to do so. No lollies at my house ready for other folks' spoiled brats to demand. I know of children knocking on doors with eggs in hand ready to wreak havoc on your front door & windows if you don't satisfy their greedy demands, this with laughing parents in tow!
Insane if you ask me. It is a tradition/celebration that has absolutely no meaning in this country.
I like this story I read the other day -
Today for Halloween, I had to pass out candy to the little kids. When I looked to my neighbor's yard, he just left a bucket full of candy with a sign saying "Please take two" and there was a garbage can right next to it. I saw a little kid laugh and try to take a handful, until my neighbor popped out of the trash can in a mask yelling " I SAID TAKE TWO!" The kid ran away crying. This happened about 18 more times...:-)
Calibos
05-11-2009, 02:28 AM
Hate to break it to you, but the 'Trick' part of 'Trick or Treat' is an idle threat certainly from the young kids with guardians waiting at the gate. Wow, what a bunch of Curmudgeons!!
Nightskystargaz
05-11-2009, 03:33 AM
YES a lot of KIDS did come to my front door, They ran me out of candy.
:thanx:,
Tom
seanliddelow
05-11-2009, 10:45 PM
Ha Ha:rofl: thats classic I love scaring littile kids.
OK I stuffed up and spoke before I thought, :rolleyes: that has happened before, I apoligise ;) for my neglect in not knowing everything, :shrug: and will say no more,
Leon :thumbsup:
StevenA
10-11-2009, 11:41 AM
I was always under the notion of Halloween edicate that ran something like: If your porch light is on then I give candy. If it is off then don't bother knocking I do not participate.
Also the Trick part is instead of candy and performed by the tenant not the kids who are out for a fun night. The trick instead of candy.
As for my house on Halloween only 2 kids came and said trick or traet and they put no effort into it. No costume what so ever. Just shorts, Tshirt and runners. Last year was the same too but more kids knocked on the door till about midnight.
I do not let my kids Trick or Treat. I have read about bigger kids bashing smaller ones for the candy. I have hear of abusive adults at doors instead of simple go aways or sorry no Trick and Treating. What is this world coming too. It will be America soon and we will have razor blade inplanted into apples and poisons in cookies and lollies etc. No I tell the kids that Halloween is a commercial rendition of All Hallows Night. If you are curious look it up.
JethroB76
10-11-2009, 12:51 PM
Wow, there is some exciting people on here
Enchilada
10-11-2009, 06:12 PM
Probably all Collingwood supporters…:rofl:
I believe they are starting to rise out of the woodwork after their loss (again) in September...
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