I am fully aware that I fly the Hallowe’en flag alone on this boat. Indy and Stylish like it, of course, but since our Hallowe’en activities change from year to year, they haven’t built up a sense of tradition-through-repetition the way I did. Erik finds the entire urban trick-or-treating formula mystifying. As best I can tell, he travelled back to the rural 1880s for his Hallowe’ens. On Hallowe’en night, he and a friend rode on horseback between a handful of farms. They clopped down lanes lit with candled sheep skulls, and were invited into dim kitchens to sip hot cider and eat home-made treats while gammers and gaffers told them terrifying stories of local murders and haunted inns. What a show-off. I’m sure I had just as much fun strolling from house to house dressed as a punk rocker and collecting tiny Mars bars in a pillowcase.
We only really woke to the fact that Hallowe’en was upon us once again when Stylish was talking to her best friend from home. Her friend asked what Stylish was going to be on the big day, offering that she herself planned to be a ghost. Stylish and Indy blinked at each other.
“Mom, are we having Hallowe’en this year?” asked Stylish.
“Yes!” As if I would skip Hallowe’en. Erik rolled his eyes. “We’ll do something. A party, a cookout – something.”
Indy discovered an old Hallowe’en activity book in the
craft drawer. Soon the girls were making
construction paper witches and wizards, egg carton spiders and tiny cardboard
pumpkins. My mother included some
decorations in a care package of school books, and so we added paper ghosts and
Boo! signs to the decoration extravaganza.
A lucky trip to the local Dollar Store equivalent
provided Indy with a devil costume. In
good Dollar Store style, the horns failed to light up as advertised, but she
was more than content to poke people in the rear with her pitchfork. Indy completed the ensemble with her skeleton
pajamas, an item which has featured on one child or the other on all of the
last four Hallowe’ens. Oh, you thrifty
Schaefers.
Stylish built herself a Kyoshi Warrior costume (from the Avatar
anime). She topped it off with a plastic
samurai sword found on sale in Carrefour (haven’t I said that New Cal has
everything?), and now both girls were armed and ready.
We had our first Hallowe’en on the 29th. A friend had arranged for the girls to
trick-or-treat at the marina with her son, their good friend. The trio of Devil, Kyoshi Warrior and Tin Tin
followed a complicated set of clues to determine which were their designated
trick-or-treating boats. They cobbled
together a “trick” involving the splits, Twinkle Twinkle Little Star and lots
of hopping, and were rewarded with an excess of candy from cruisers who fondly
remembered their own trick-or-treating days.
Hallowe’en #1 was a win.
Candy candy candy candy candy! |
“Real Hallowe’en” was still on the horizon. We had decided to have a party aboard Papillon. Of course, we didn’t actually have any firm
guests for the party yet. All of the kid-boats
of our acquaintance had, like us, been playing a game of musical chairs, island-
and bay-hopping in the area around Noumea.
It was still a mystery who would arrive at our current location by the
31st. No matter. I was sure it would all work out, even if it
was just the four of us that night.
The day came, and we started getting ready. When the girls found a recipe for Monster
Mouth cupcakes in their activity book, I could hardly say no.
“You’re making cupcakes, too?” said Erik. “How big is this Hallowe’en getting?”
“Pfft. It’s only
cupcakes,” I said. “I can manage.”
That was an error on my part. My free-and-easy insistence that this Hallowe’en
party was going to be no big deal opened the door to Erik ‘s favourite
activity: inviting people over. For
coffee, for cake, for a beer, for a water – irrelevant. Come sit in our cockpit and chat. I’m sure he saw it as a chance to get the
Hallowe’en he wanted, too (minus the horses, of course.)
Because what lemon cupcakes need are chocolate frosting and jellybeans, obviously. |
“So, who’s coming?” I asked as I mixed cupcake batter.
“Oh, you know,” he said casually. “Winfried and Ute. Paul and Catherine. Maybe Esti and Mario.”
“Mmmm.” I opened
the cupboard and prepared to bake a second cake.
Our tiny green squash was carved and the guests en
route. Indy dove back into her
devil-gear. In the end we had five kids
and seven adults on board, and a surprise set of three trick-or-treaters who
arrived in a dinghy. (Lucky for me, I
had extra candy at the ready. Ka-pow! Score one for urban Hallowe’en preparedness.) Everyone laughed, and ate, and admired the
costumes. The sweets were gone in a
twinkling.
Hours later, the kids in bed, I washed the stack of cake
plates. I had to admit, this strange
merger of Hallowe’en styles had worked pretty well.
3 comments:
Halloween, the best day/night of the year & you got to celebrate twice. How fabulous is that. Your monster cupcakes looked delicious.
Indy & Stylish you both look great in your costumes- very scary & warrior like.
The little pumpkin squash is adorable
Love Grannie
What!? You mean everyone doesn't decorate with old sheep and cow skulls!?!
Glad you enjoyed Hallowe'en
ann
Sounds like you had a great celebration! Thank goodness our girls are a little older than yours...our Hallowe'en was virtually non-existent. We considered dressing up like tacky tourists but Hallowe'en isn't really done up like it is at home, here in Austria. So sad
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