A visit in the past couple of weeks to some of the offsprings up in Maryland US involved going out to a farm and shoosing a few pumpkins of various sizes for carving and display on the front doorstep. In this semi-rural area I don’t understand why everyone pretty well doesn’t have pumpkin vines trailing all over their back fences – but they don’t: anyway there are lots of places you can get them, from outside your local grocery store to one of the farms between your town and the next. At this place it was big seasonal business – fascinating collections of pumpkin-looking ones and more ornamental quash, incredible variety. Just some are shown here.
Well the boys entered a frenzy of carving and really got into the spirit of a book they have of pumkin carving design ideas – with the emphasis on the less benign, no, lets say, petty nasty pumpkin visages! I joined in too, with help at some of the finer points for the younger carver, and they looked great on the front step with little lights inside….
Well of course, this has nothing to do with the culture in Uruguay, where I am sorry to say retailers are yet again revving up for this imported culturally irrelvant event. We will not be here, but will be enjoying visiting Peru for the first time ever – really looking forward to that. There’ll be a couple of Uruguayans here house sitting, staving off this year’s trick-or-treaters. I hope it’s not all too much for them, as it’s really ‘bad’ here in our part of the city and one or two neighbouring barrios. Our first year in this house I just answered the bell a number of times and siad “Sorry, no, we don’t do halloween” and had an egg thrown at the house for our trouble. It damaged the paintwork badly enough to need repainting, making that just wanton vandalism IMHO, nothing less. Since then we have gone out for the evening, leaving a box of wrapped sweets n at the gate asking people to take one and leave the rest – but I imagine most coming along have been faced with an empty box, but too bad.