Destinations Magazine

New York Stories (5) – Spooky!

By Gardenamateur

The good news for the little tackers going out Trick or Treating for Halloween tonight in New York is that in many areas the snow will have melted and they won't all be slipping over, spilling their stashes of candy everywhere. Wouldn't that be terrible! I'm not sure whether we'll get a knock at the door up here on the 12th floor in our Manhattan Hotel, but you never know your bad luck, do you?

As we've driven across the country and walked around the streets of many towns, the Halloween decorations on houses and shops have been such a delightful thing to see. Some involve elaborate ghoulish figures, others are as simple and charming as a set of hand-cut pumpkins on the front steps. And so here's a few photos of the Halloween decorations we have seen all across the country, starting here with some we spotted in New York City in yesterday's walkies.

New York Stories (5) – spooky!"I now pronounce you ghoul and wife" a macabre wedding ceremony on the steps of a Greenwich Village house.
New York Stories (5) – spooky!I've been told these pumpkins are a special type grown each year for Halloween. They're supposedly much easier to hollow out and carve but aren't that good for eating (can my American gardener/readers confirm this?). We've seen them for sale in parking lots and local parks in some towns, with huge areas turned into a sea of orange as thousands of pumpkins are arrayed for customers to choose a few to take home.
New York Stories (5) – spooky!This graveside awakening is enough to give you nightmares. Love their work (again in New York City).
New York Stories (5) – spooky!Charleston, South Carolina, did itself proud with its Halloween decorations. We love these balcony folk.
New York Stories (5) – spooky!This Charleston witch looks fab at the moment, but where do they keep her the rest of the year? Maybe it's in a cupboard to give burglars and snoops a fright?
New York Stories (5) – spooky!Same deal with this Charleston front garden guy who greets passers-by with a cheery "boo!". Surely he lives in the attic in the off-season. Must terrify the electricians doing repairs up there...
New York Stories (5) – spooky!Passing through many country towns we spotted simple harvest displays of haybales and pumpkins that are a simultaneous feature of this October Harvest/Halloween season. This one was in the town square of Swainsboro, Georgia. There were several of these in the square, including one with a scarecrow. Hundreds and hundreds of shops everywhere had mini displays of haybales/pumpkins/scarecrows in their front windows, even teeny little plastic ones on the store counter as well. The whole nation is into it!
New York Stories (5) – spooky!If you think you've seen this photo of a front step harvest display before, you have. It's from Galveston, Texas.
New York Stories (5) – spooky!Hand-carving your own pumpkins is a real skill. You can buy videos on how to do it, there are demos on TV on how to do it, and as these pumpkins in New Orleans show, when well done it's great folk art. At night, with candles inside the pumpkins, the effect is superb.
New York Stories (5) – spooky!New Orleans cheerfully embraces graveside humor all year-round, and so Halloween just brings out the best in them. Virtually every balcony had something ghoulish hanging from it.
New York Stories (5) – spooky!At any other time of year this front door in the Garden District of New Orleans would be a worry. Right now, it's just great.
New York Stories (5) – spooky!Around the corner from that spooky front door, in the side garden, ghosts fluttered from the trees.

New York Stories (5) – spooky!And in the French Quarter, the staff are here to help you find the graveyard of your choice.


The major Halloween Street Parade tonight in New York City is between 6th and 16th Streets in Greenwich Village, and we're not sure if we'll be there or not to join the crush, but it's no problem if we aren't there, as they televise it live on local TV, much as they do with the Mardi Gras Parade back in Sydney each year. Meanwhile, we await a knock at the door this evening, and hope it is merely a sugar-loving child dressed as a demon or witch, and not the real thing.

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