Host a Howling Good Halloween Party
MITK is dressed up as Octo-Mom to share some spooky recipes and spine-tingling games.
Take a look at MITK on CTV Ottawa Morning where she demonstrates these great ideas
Get your kids involved in the decorating for the party with a few of these easy tips and crafts
- Use a big roll of caution tape to criss- cross across doors that are off limits.
- Make signs that warn Beware or Haunted
- Cut monster footprints from cardboard and have them lead from party room to party room. You can even make a path to the bathroom.
- Make ghoulish centerpieces and ornaments from salt dough
- Salt Dough: Easy to roll out dough and cut shapes with cookie cutters. Salt dough crafts will air dry in a day or two. If you need immediate results, bake them in the oven at 200 degrees Fahrenheit until they harden. Easy recipe : 2 cups all purpose flour/ 2 cups of salt/ 1 cup of water. Mix with your hands until moist and smooth.
- Go through your recycling bin and pull out different shaped bottles. Fill them with water and food colouring to create apothecaries of poison mixtures.
- Wrap recycled containers with Halloween themed paper or use felt to create some monster faces. Use them as a treat buckets for your popcorn and pretzel-type snacks.
- Make haunting luminaries. Wrap clear glasses or vases in orange tissue paper. Cut out shapes or find other décor items to make a jack-o-lantern faces. These can be used indoors or out. Another great idea for luminaries is to drarw or colour shapes and faces on brown paper bags . Older kids can cut designs into the bags. Fill the bags a third full with sand. Add a tea light and line your walkway or porch.
- Use leaves. Take old clothes and stuff them with leaves. Scatter them on the lawn with heads or leave them headless.
- Eyes are on you. Use plastic foam balls. Cut them in half and paint black pupils.
- Make a craft box available to your little party goers. You never know what spooky creativity will arise. Your box could include: plastic spiders, stickers, stamps, googly eyes, pom poms, ribbon, pipe cleaners, cookie cutters to trace, different coloured felt and construction paper, scissors, markers, glitter glue or feathers. Be sure to keep a glue gun near by.
Play Goulish Games
Find the eyeballs in the brains
Broom ball
Scavenger hunt
- Eye of a newt – dried bean
- Bat hair – dryer lint
- Snake teeth – grains of white rice
- Mouse kidney –kidney bean
- Owl feather- colourful craft feather
- Dusty corpse – baking soda in a small plastic bag
Grab the Ghost
Supplies
Paper towels
Small balls
Yarn
Markers
Pennies
Large paper cirlce
Funnel
Die
Instructions
- Before the party, make ghosts by draping a piece of paper towel around a small ball, such as a Superball (or in a pinch, a wadded-up paper towel). Cinch the towel around the ball and secure with one end of a 2-foot length of yarn.
- Have guests draw a face on their ghosts with markers.
- At the start of the game, each player is given ten pennies. Choose one person to be the goblin. The other players lay their ghosts on the large paper circle and hold on to the yarn leash. The goblin holds the funnel, upside down, at least 2 feet above the circle.
- The goblin chooses two numbers on a die, announces them to the group, then rolls. If either of the chosen numbers appears, the players try to pull their ghosts out of the circle before the goblin can slam the funnel down over them. If a player is caught, he must give the goblin a penny. If the chosen numbers do not appear, but the players panic and yank their ghosts out of the circle anyway, it's another penny to the goblin. The goblin, for his part, is allowed to fake a funnel slam, but if he touches any ghost, he must shell out a penny to each player. After three rolls of the die, the next player takes over as goblin. Play is over when one player runs out of pennies. The player with the most coins wins.
Witches Brew
Build a Skeleton
Guess the Ghost
Poor Joe
Here are some other hauntingly fun games
- Monster freeze dance
- Guess how many worms or candies are in the jar.
- Pumpkin pass along (use little gourds)
- Pin the witch on the broom (pin up broom, cut out witch, tape or thumb tacks)
- Cotton ball relay- (cotton balls - use orange or black, large spoons and two plastic pumpkins)
- Doughnuts on a string or bobbing for apples (apples or doughnuts with sprinkles tied to the end of a string and hung from the ceiling)
- The Dead Man’s Brains (instructions and supplies here)
- ‘Boo am I’ (spooky characters for charades writing on small slips of paper, blown up balloons to put the pieces of paper in)
- How many words can you get out of F R A N K E N S T E I N or H A L L O W E E N
- Musical Pumpkins
Make some Treat Bags
Serve up Some Spooky Stuff
No-bones-about-it vegetable skeleton
Jack-'o-lantern dip
Black-and-orange dip
Get seedy
Braaaaiiiins!
Boo-nanas
Witches' teeth
Orange-'o-lantern
Black Bean Cat Crudite
Mummies
Spooky Punch
- Use a big roll of caution tape to criss- cross across doors that are off limits.
- Make signs that warn Beware or Haunted
- Cut monster footprints from cardboard and have them lead from party room to party room. You can even make a path to the bathroom.
- Make ghoulish centerpieces and ornaments from salt dough
- Salt Dough: Easy to roll out dough and cut shapes with cookie cutters. Salt dough crafts will air dry in a day or two. If you need immediate results, bake them in the oven at 200 degrees Fahrenheit until they harden. Easy recipe : 2 cups all purpose flour/ 2 cups of salt/ 1 cup of water. Mix with your hands until moist and smooth.
- Go through your recycling bin and pull out different shaped bottles. Fill them with water and food colouring to create apothecaries of poison mixtures.
- Wrap recycled containers with Halloween themed paper or use felt to create some monster faces. Use them as a treat buckets for your popcorn and pretzel-type snacks.
- Make haunting luminaries. Wrap clear glasses or vases in orange tissue paper. Cut out shapes or find other décor items to make a jack-o-lantern faces. These can be used indoors or out. Another great idea for luminaries is to drarw or colour shapes and faces on brown paper bags . Older kids can cut designs into the bags. Fill the bags a third full with sand. Add a tea light and line your walkway or porch.
- Use leaves. Take old clothes and stuff them with leaves. Scatter them on the lawn with heads or leave them headless.
- Eyes are on you. Use plastic foam balls. Cut them in half and paint black pupils.
- Make a craft box available to your little party goers. You never know what spooky creativity will arise. Your box could include: plastic spiders, stickers, stamps, googly eyes, pom poms, ribbon, pipe cleaners, cookie cutters to trace, different coloured felt and construction paper, scissors, markers, glitter glue or feathers. Be sure to keep a glue gun near by.
If you are giving prizes for the winners of the games, there are a lot of theme related treats out there. A flashlight or reflective wear make good prizes for trick or treaters. Add marbles to cooked spaghetti to create this ghoulish game. Whoever collects the most eyeballs in two minutes wins. Hint: Add one tablespoon of cooking oil per box to keep noodles from sticking. Cook at least 3 boxes. They are easy to pick up at the grocery store, but if you have too many guests, you can add to the invite. Bring a broom for some bewitching games.Have a scavenger hunt to find treats or for ingredients for a witches brew. Some creative ingredients I came across are:
- Eye of a newt – dried bean
- Bat hair – dryer lint
- Snake teeth – grains of white rice
- Mouse kidney –kidney bean
- Owl feather- colourful craft feather
- Dusty corpse – baking soda in a small plastic bag
To make a witches brew add 2 cups of vinegar to a large pot. Add all of the children’s ingredients from the scavenger hunt, especially the dusty corpse. Have extra dusty corpse to add to the cauldron. It will bubble and froth before their eyes.Be sure to wash your hands before this game, because all of the skeletons will be thrown into the pot to make a gruesome gruel. With an illustration as a guide use assorted dried pasta to create a scary skeleton. Make sure to have alphabet letters to label and name the skeleton.
Use a recyclable grocery bag or pillow casesLet kids come up with their own Halloween pattern or picture of a pumpkin, bats, globlins, monsters or ghosts. You could also use cookies cutters to trace the shapes. Use paint to colour in the shapes. Older kids may want to paint free hand.Serve up some fun using different sized clear containers. Fill them freaky fun candies such as gummy worms and chocolate eyeballs. You can also add googly eyes to some of the containers so they keep on ‘eye’ on the kids. Pumpkins make great serving bowls too (especially with a wiggin’ worm salad). Some other great recipes: Trick or treat nachos Gummy worm punch Oozy green eyeballs Jack o lantern sloppy Joe Pie Monster cheese ballWith thanks to Taste of Home for these wonderful recipies and ideas.
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