The Northland Age

No longer bowled over by Halloween trick-or-treaters

- Kevin Page

You may feel the need to call me a miserable sod after you read this, but I have to say I’m over this trick-ortreat thing Kiwi kids seem to have embraced over the past decade or so.

I mean it’s an American thing isn’t it? Not one of our traditions.

I recall seeing it on telly back in the 70s (think Partridge Family, Brady Bunch etc etc) and that was it. I don’t think we ever gave a thought to giving it a go ourselves and nor did those younger than us who were perhaps a little more susceptibl­e to the temptation­s of free lollies.

But suddenly our younger residents seem to have picked it up and run with it. And with great gusto too. Well, some of them. For others it has become an absolute scam, in my experience.

Let me explain.

I’d say 10 years ago, maybe in a brief, one of those “it’s for the kids” moments, I persuaded Mrs P we should enter into the spirit of things and make sure we had a bowl of lollies available for the wee cherubs of the neighbourh­ood.

It would be a nice thing to do, I said.

In my mind I had visions of a bunch of 5 or 6-year-olds dressed as witches and wizards with big pointy hats, accompanie­d by one or two sensible parents, politely taking one lolly from the bowl, saying “thank you” then happily skipping off to the next victim.

Naturally, with that vision in mind, I found the biggest bowl I could and filled it to the brim with an assortment of wrapped chocolates and various other individual lollies.

It didn’t exactly cost a fortune but

it would be fair to say I was reminded of it for the next few years whenever I grumbled about Mrs P’s latest purchase from Briscoes.

You know the one I mean. The thing we didn’t need but she bought because it was 60 per cent off. Anyway.

So, there we are on that first Halloween and my bowl is on the front step and sure enough along came various witches, wizards, fairies and zombies. I think we even had an All Black turn up, which was kind of weird and nothing to do with scary old Halloween but I had to confess I admired the plucky young chap’s keeness to be involved.

The following year we did the same again. Only this time the lollies didn’t last very long as the witches, wizards, fairies and zombies seemed to be a bit older and took handfuls of lollies rather than the single ones from the previous year.

From memory they also forgot to say “thank you”.

A couple of years later I watched in surprise as a peoplemove­r-load of what turned out to be about six or seven again older trick-or-treaters, presumably from a different suburb, pulled up outside our house and waited for me to put the bowl of goodies out on the deck.

No sooner had I done so than the horde leapt from the car, raced up the driveway and stripped it clean. Now it gets interestin­g.

I swear as the last zombie put a handful in his bag, he took out a cellphone and sent a message.

Call me cynical but I firmly believe word had got out pickings were good at our place.

He was letting his mates know my bowl was stripped clean and they’d be better off focusing their efforts elsewhere. In my mind I had the cheeky little buggers all meeting back at some secret hideaway where they emptied the goodies out on a table and solemnly divided them up.

Right, I thought, next year will be different.

That time I filled the bowl with apples, mandarins, kiwifruit and bananas. And hardly anything went.

To be fair, some of the littlies did take mandarins but the disappoint­ed looks on their faces was crushing to say the least. It would also be fair to say some of the accompanyi­ng parents shot me a glance that suggested I was, in fact, the miserable sod referred to at the start of this piece.

A year later I brought the lollies back, on a smaller scale, but things seemed to have changed again.

No longer was trick or treating just for the little ones. It seemed dozens of high school kids were now wandering around the neighbourh­ood looking to satisfy their sweet tooth.

To really rub salt in, many of them had not given much thought to their costume and some had not even bothered at all.

And so, because I felt they were maybe a little intimidati­ng to the littlies, I policed the handouts a lot more stringentl­y.

We were nearly at the bottom of the bowl when a kid came up the driveway with his mate. I’d say they were both about 14 or 15. One had a Los Angeles Lakers cap on and from what I could see that was about the extent of his costume.

I asked the other kid about his costume. Who or what had he come as?

He gave me a mumbled teenagerlo­oking-at-his-feet response.

I simply have no idea what he said — to be honest he may have had a

very good excuse — but I recall thinking “well, if he’s not going to make much of an effort, then nor will I”.

And with that I plucked a lemon from the bush right next to our deck, dropped it in his bag and bade them farewell.

I watched them walk back down the driveway. When he got to the end he took the lemon out of his bag and threw it aside.

So, this Halloween just gone I thought enough was enough and I did something completely different.

I took the big bowl I’d bought years ago, turned it upside down and put it at the bottom of the drive. On top I placed a sign.

It read: No trick or treaters thank you. PS: Bowl below is free to a good home.

Kevin Page is a teller of tall tales with a firm belief too much serious news gives you frown lines. Feel free to share stories to kevin.page@nzme.

co.nz .

State of the roads

Re the article in the Northern Advocate (October 28) by Angela Woods. It’s time all road users (except electric car owners who don’t pay any road charges) complained to NZ Transport and there local MPs about the state of the roads, we as drivers should not have to put up with the state our roads are in. NZ Transport has recently taken on a whole lot more staff for what I don’t know, but they can take your call or email, the more pressure we put on these people the sooner they get the message that we are fed up with what we have at the moment.

The amount of money the Government receives from the tax on fuels at the pump and road users charges is scandalous, but we get nothing in return.

You just have to look at the Brynderwyn­s. It has recently had two slips underminin­g the road that have been repaired until the next time. The new road of the Brynderwyn­s heading north is breaking up already. It’s no good blaming the truck drivers or buses or cars as the road is just not fit for purpose. Cheap repairs are constantly needing patch-ups, and the sticks that divide the centre lane heading into Whangā rei was a total waste of our money as taxpayers.

What is the point of having a four lane highway that ends at

Warkworth, all it does is shift the bottle neck a bit further north. I wish the Government, whoever it is, just gets the job done.

Apparently when Labour came into power the money was already set aside for the four lane highway, so what happened to our money? New Zealanders are fairly patient people, until we are taken for fools who will just put up with it.

S J Kirton Maungatū roto

 ?? Photo / NZME ?? The trick-or-treaters seemed to get older and less polite as the years went on.
Photo / NZME The trick-or-treaters seemed to get older and less polite as the years went on.
 ?? ?? Some of Kerikeri Rd is being rebuilt. A letter writer takes issue with calls for compensati­on to be paid to drivers and businesses inconvenie­nced by the repairs.
Some of Kerikeri Rd is being rebuilt. A letter writer takes issue with calls for compensati­on to be paid to drivers and businesses inconvenie­nced by the repairs.

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