11.24.09

Halloween and “the holidays”

Posted in Arts & Culture, San Francisco at 9.37 am by Caitlin

IMG_0072I now know why Americans refer to this time of year as “the holidays”. I always thought that it was a politically correct term to avoid using the word “Christmas” and include other religious festivals such as Hanukkah. I was partly right.

It is also because Christmas is not the only holiday, even for Christians. There are major holiday events from the end of October to the end of December. Halloween is a big deal in this country, Thanksgiving comes a month later, then Christmas a month after that.

Of course I knew about Halloween and Thanksgiving before moving here, but I had not appreciated how quickly the festivals seem to follow each other, so that they combine to produce a holiday season. Here I am putting my Halloween photos up and Thanksgiving is only two days away!

IMG_0066We had our first American Halloween this year and it was a lot of fun. Our street was decked out with crazy house decorations – giant spiders on porches, white ghosts on trees, and our neighbours two doors up even had a coffin that you could feel inside to feel the “devil’s heart” (really two balloons covered in vegetable oil).

The shops were overflowing with pumpkins the week or two before Halloween so we decided to carve one. We created our first ever Jack O’Lantern following these instructions. It was quite hard work scraping out all the seeds and pulp but fun as well. (Gratuitous link: I love this ‘Jackie O Lantern’).

Here’s the result of my first pumpkin carving effort:

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My husband had headed down to our shopping district earlier and seen dozens of people trick-or-treating along the main street. The shops actually employed people to stand at the front door giving out “candy” (the term for any sweet treats)!

Back at our place, the little kids started coming around with their parents from about 5pm and the older kids in groups from about 6.30pm. We stood out by our gate in our Star Wars cloaks from Tunisia giving out mini chocolate bars. We gave out 100 pieces of candy in two hours.

IMG_0067We didn’t see so many traditional Halloween outfits like witches and ghosts but we did see classic kids’ dress-up ensembles such as butterflies and princesses and super heroes. Many of the costumes were very creative. One of my favourites was a two-year-old girl in a homemade flapper outfit. Another was a little boy dressed as a firefighter, while his baby sister was in a dalmatian outfit (dalmatians being the traditional fire station dog).

Most of the street was out – people were either standing in front of their houses or trick-or-treating with their children – so there was a lot of neighbourly camaraderie. I really enjoyed it.

At 7pm, just as we ran out of candy, it was time for my husband and I to go and catch the streetcar downtown. We had tickets to see a screening of Nosferatu, the silent film vampire classic. (It’s basically a rip-off of Dracula and was buried for years because of a copyright dispute with Bram Stoker’s estate). We saw it at the Davies Symphony Hall, where we also saw the San Francisco Symphony perform Disney music recently. Except this time, instead of the symphony, the musical accompaniment was a huge pipe organ and a few other synchronised sound effects, such as a wind machine and a wand that created various noises when waved in the air.

Nosferatu was cool but it was also great to go downtown and check out San Francisco on Halloween. Dressing up for Halloween is not just something that children do in this city – all the adults were dressed up too. There were some classic outfits, including a press photographer with a ladder and fake ticket inspectors.

We ended the evening at a local bar to help celebrate a friend’s birthday. That was also fun and it also meant we met a few of his and his partner’s friends. I don’t think I’ve ever had that much fun on Halloween before, even as a kid. (Although I’ve been to a few good Halloween parties in the past).

The sequel to Halloween comes two days later with Dia de los Muertos or Day of the Dead. But that, my friends, is a subject for another post.

1 Comment »

  1. Travel ideas for Christmas and the holidays | Roaming Tales said,

    December 18, 2009 at 12.35 am

    [...] is, as Americans like to call it, the holiday season. I prefer “festive season”, since the word “holiday” to me is synonymous [...]

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