Elementary School PTO holds Fall Festival

BARKHAMSTED — The Barkhamsted Elementary School PTO held its annual Fall Festival on Saturday, Oct. 25.

The event included a haunted house and trunk-or-treating. A soapbox derby was held outside and sponsored by the Lions Club.

Julie Briere decorated the trunk of her car with cardboard Halloween cutouts and a fake severed hand.

“Trunk-or-treat has been going on for over five years,” Briere said. “Everybody parks in the school parking lot and opens the back of their cars. Some people decorate their trunks, some people don’t. All the parents sit out with candy while the kids trick-or-treat from car to car. It gives them a safe place to run around. The fire department will be here tonight and they’re bringing lights so it won’t be pitch dark. They’re giving out a couple of prizes for the best decorated cars.”

PTO member Kim Connors dressed up like a witch and decorated her trunk in a “Wizard of Oz” theme.

“The parents get a chance to decorate their cars and dress up,” Connors said. “It’s a safe environment for the kids to trick-or-treat in. It’s nice because we live in a rural area where the houses are all spread out. For the kids it’s really easy. Once the parking lot is full they close it down so we don’t have to worry about traffic. It’s a lot of fun.” 

A haunted house in the school gymnasium was designed by chairperson Nate Tomlin. 

“I’ve always loved Halloween ever since I was a kid,” Tomlin said. “Over four years ago we started the trunk-or-treat in the parking lot and I suggested to the PTO that we incorporate a haunted house. I designed it, got volunteers and made it happen.”

Tomlin said the haunted house has always been a popular attraction at the festival.

“Every year we learn from the previous years,” Tomlin said, “I get ideas from going through other haunted houses and my imagination. I think the kids that go through it end up wanting to work in it the following year because they realize how much fun it is. This year we were able to have a lot more actors, so there’s a lot less dead space. No pun intended.”

For the cost of $5, residents were led through the haunted house by several scary tour guides. They were taken through dark passages and several horror themed rooms. A cemetery, a zombie granny holding a dead rat and a morgue were just some of the scenes one could glimpse in the almost pitch blackness. A clown with giant fangs waited at the end to ensure one final moment of terror.

“Everybody’s scared of clowns, so we put him at the end since that’s our last chance to scare people,” Tomlin said.

Click here for a photo.

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