1. Go big on DIY decorations.
Build anticipation for the big day by making your Halloween décor a showstopper. Get your child started on crafty sessions now. Think: Paper chains around the mailbox, lights over the door and construction paper silhouettes in the windows.
2. Create a Halloween home movie or play.
It’s the perfect scenario: Everyone already has a costume! Get the family involved in writing a script, building or arranging a “set,” picking out theme music, rehearsing, and filming. Then share it as a “Quarantine-O-Ween” family greeting.
3. Learn a Halloween dance.
This could be the big finale for your home video or play – or just a great way to get some exercise and laugh together as a family. Search YouTube for “monster mash dance,” “monster shuffle” – or choreograph your own, featuring your child’s best moves! Practice then perform, preferably in costume.
4. Plan a scary (or not-so-scary) movie night.
Host a full-length feature with a theme that ties to Halloween or your child’s costume, or plan a marathon of Halloween-themed TV episodes. To make sure your selections are age appropriate, check commonsensemedia.org.
5. Have a Halloween-themed reading hour.
Check your library for book suggestions! Many offer curbside pick-up during COVID-19. (And if you need help getting your child excited about reading,)
6. Make Halloween treats.
From cookies frosted to look like witch hats to tangerines peeled and garnished with mint to look like pumpkins, the options are endless. Whatever you decide, you’ll be spending time with your child building kitchen skills and having fun.
7. Camp out under the blue moon.
In case you hadn’t heard, there will be a full moon on Oct. 31, 2020 – something that happens just once every 18 or 19 years. It’s also a “blue moon,” aka the second full moon of the month. So set up a tent, and enjoy the show. Howl if you want to.
8. Host a video chat costume party.
9. Join a virtual pumpkin-carving or -painting contest.
10. Create a Quarantine-O-Ween scavenger hunt.
11. Have your child “art direct” a Halloween family photo shoot.
12. Create a Halloween home gallery.
13. Host a neighborhood drive-by trick-or-treat or reverse trick-or-treat.
14. Search for drive-through Halloween activities.
When the coronavirus pandemic ends, you and your child can return to the trick-or-treating, haunted houses and other Halloween celebrations you love. But until then, have fun trying out new traditions – you may find some to bring back next year.