Tag Archives: Halloween in Hasbrouck Heights NJ

Day Three Hundred and Sixty Four Halloween zipped by and I did not see a Ghost! October 1st-31st, 2025

I started October with one game plan, not to over do it this year with loads of activities. At this point, I had been to almost every activity in the area over the last five years and I needed to concentrate on work and my writing this time around. I was still catching up with blogs from the summer and work with my 102 students at the college was getting over whelming. I took it easy this Halloween and did not cram as much in as previous years.

That and the fact that over the last five years I have been to every haunted house tour, cemetery graveyard walk, themed meal event and musical performance that I can find in the tri-state area. I had been to them multiple times and I wanted to find new things to do. Plus work was taking up a lot of my time, so I learned to better pace things this year.

The month started off with a tour to see the foliage both in New Jersey and in Upstate New York. The first trip I made was for the Apple Festival at the Gandy Farmstead which I had toured during the Firemen’s Convention two weeks earlier and two weeks after that it was back to the Hudson River Valley for the Annual Sheep and Wool Festival.

My blog on the Apple Festival at the Gandy Farmstead:

I had a very busy weekend of running around South Jersey. I have been updating my blog on the Historical Sites of South Jersey and trying to visit as many of this small museums and special events venues before they close for the season. Like any of my blogging trips, I planned the weekend like “D Day”. I lucked out as the weather was wonderful both days, clear, sunny and in the mid 80’s. I could not think of a better time to go to the shore than post-Labor Day weekend. My goal was to attend the Apple Festival that I had heard about at the Gandy Farmstead Museum when I toured the home for my blog, VisitingaMuseum.com (see blog and reviews).

The JW Gandy Farmstead Museum at 26 Tyler Road in Greenfield, NJ

Click to access gandy-house-history_copy_%2015June2008.pdf

https://capemaycountynj.gov/DocumentCenter/View/9331/CMC-Heritage-brochure-2022

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g46699-d33734753-r1031187378-John_Westley_Gandy_Farmstead-Ocean_View_Cape_May_County_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

My blog on the Gandy Farmstead Museum:

Two weeks after my initial visit to the Gandy House during the Firemen’s Convention, I returned for the Historical Society’s Annual Apple Festival on Saturday, October 4th. The event reminded me of the Brinckerhoff House Strawberry Festival I had attended in May , a very nice family and community event that attracted everyone.

The East Fishkill Historical Society-Brinckerhoff House Strawberry Festival 2025/Exploring Fishkill, NY blog:

https://mywalkinmanhattan.com/tag/exploring-fishkill-ny/

Since there were a lot of shore towns I wanted to revisit while the weather was nice, I arranged to stay at an Airbnb in Ocean City so I had plenty of time to do what I needed to do and relax afterwards. Plus when the event was over, I could visit Ocean City and explore both the downtown and the boardwalk.

I could not believe how crowded the roads were as so many places were having either Fall festivals or October Fest. Route 9 was like a parking lot near Smithville, NJ as the town was having their ‘October Fest’ over both days of the weekend. Traffic was backed up for about two miles trying to get in so I got off Route 9 and traveled down the Garden State Parkway.

I got to the Apple Festival around noon and the parking lot was packed with people. One of the members said later that afternoon that he could not believe the consistent crowds as it was still busy at 2:15pm (the festival was over by 3:00pm). The crowds were filled with several generations of family members who I am sure were traveling from one event to another on this spectacular sunny morning. People were still arriving even as the event was winding down that afternoon.

The sign welcoming you to the event

When I arrived at the festival, the parking lot was still filling up so I had to park way in the back so I could get in and out easily.

On the Gandy family property on the other side of the home, they had an antique car show, a mini train ride around the tracks of this part of the property and a Caboose train car that you could explore.

The train tracks around the farm property

The train set up and tracks to tour around the farm

The train rides were really popular with both the small and ‘big’ kids

This small train trip had a nice sized line to it as families were really enjoying themselves

The back of the Gandy Farmstead with crafts and entertainment

Entering the Apple Festival with a Farmers Market and Apple sale

The Farmers Market of locally grown produce

There was a stand that was a mini Farmers Market with locally grown apples, pumpkins, squash and tomatoes on top of other produce. It was so nicely displayed and the prices were really reasonable.

They had a wonderful duo interesting the crowds that afternoon

There were all sorts of crafts stands around where the entertainment was performing

The local crafts people were really talented and included crocheted, painters, floral arrangers and jewelry markers. There were all sorts of handmade items and there were stands to buy homemade jellies and pickles and the prices were not like North Jersey, where a jar of jam at a Farmers Market will run you $15.00. The prices here were closer to $5.00 for certain items, which I thought was very fair.

One woman sold flowers from her gardens and arranged bouquets

This woman painted her own crafts and did beautiful work for both Halloween and Christmas

Here beautiful holiday crafts

I loved this Santa tree and was going to get it for my mom

This woman had the most beautiful handmade doll clothing and knit items for the holidays

What is an Apple Festival without food? I went to the concession stand for lunch and ordered a hot dog with a glass of locally made Apple cider and had an homemade Apple Shortcake, which I found out later the members had made the night before.

The concession stand where all the food was made

Enjoying my lunch. Both the hotdogs and apple cider were locally made and that’s why it tasted so good! The apple cider was from a local farm and I wished they had sold this at the festival. I think the farmer would have sold out!

Hot dogs taste so good off the grill!

The delicious homemade Apple Shortcake with homemade apple topping were made by the members

I also stopped off at the apple stand where cases of apples were being sold. It looked like many people were going to make pies and sauce with these and the stand looked like they were selling out.

I managed to buy one of the Mango sweet apples they were selling individually

The apples were so hard, fresh and sweet that it made the perfect addition to dessert. Nothing is better than a Jersey Apple right off the vine. I could not believe how fast they sold out of the boxes of apples and the individual apples were selling just as fast.

The Mango Sweet apples

Talk about delicious

After lunch, I ran into the Board members who had helped me with the tour two weeks early and I took a quick tour of the first floor of the home. The laundry room was not open the day of my private tour, so I toured this part of the house on top of taking a better look at the first floor.

Touring the outside grape arbor

The grape arbor on an early Fall day

Touring the first floor laundry room

An early washing machine

How to do laundry at the turn of the last century

After having lunch, touring the house and visiting all the vendors I relaxed for the rest of the afternoon and listened to the entertainment perform. The duo performed a combination of 70’s hit songs, country music and some James Taylor.

The duo performing classic hits

The first part of the song “Brandy (You’re a Fine Girl)” from the 1970’s before people walked in the way

The rest of the song performed. They did an excellent job with it

Before I left just after 2:00pm, I stayed to see who won the Apple pie contest. There were only three contributors but I wanted to get a slice before I left. They did not slice them up while I was there. Bummer! I really wanted a piece of fresh Apple pie.

The winners of the Apple pie contest

The Apple Festival sponsored by the Upper Township Historical Society happens every October. It is a wonderful family event and fundraiser for the Historical Society. I know I had a lot of fun and it reminded me of the events that I went to as a kid in the 1970’s, which was long before cell phones.

It was funny that the only person who had a cell phone glued to his hand was me but then I was there to cover this event. It really was a relaxing and wonderful afternoon with good food and entertainment. It was just like the 1970’s all over again with families enjoying each other’s company. Sometimes I think that people underate these local events which are so much fun. I don’t know about everyone else, but I had a ball!

Two weekends later, I headed up to the Sheep and Wool Festival at the Duchess County Fairgrounds and the followed by the Graveyard Walk at St. James Church in Hyde Park. There is such much to see and do this time of year.

Here is my full blog on the events:

Bryant Park on October 1st, 2025

The Sheep and Wool Festival is not as big as the Dutchess County Fair but had a lot of the same food and merchant vendors. On a smaller scale, it is much more manageable but with the number of people who attend this every year, they could use more food vendors for the event.

The sign and directions in the fairgrounds

The foliage was so beautiful that afternoon

The Festival takes place the second week of October just when the Duchess County foliage is coming to its peak. The fairgrounds were covered in golds and reds.

Entering the Midway at the Sheep and Wool Festival where the food vendors were located. The foliage was at peak color.

The Midway was not as packed with vendors as the fair but is had a nice selection of food vendors

Entering the middle of the festival was getting busy

The foliage was amazing both inside and outside the fairgrounds

I got up to the fair late this time, not arriving until 2:00pm ( I thought the festival ended at 6:00pm but it ended at 5:00pm) and needed to get done lunch. Amongst all of my choices, I still always head to Janek’s, the barbecue/hamburger truck that has been my favorite for years.

Janek’s food truck is always at the same location

For years I have been getting the Piggy Back burger with Cheddar cheese and pulled pork on top(which I highly recommend) but I decided to do something different and have the Burger with freshly made Pastrami and Swiss Cheese. A very nice substitute.

The Pastrami and Swiss burger

The burger was perfectly cooked with slices of smoked pastrami on top

Yum!

After a good lunch and getting my energy back, I headed over to the animal pens and the craft stalls to see all the handmade products. My first stop was the Sheep pens, where sheering was going on and they were many contests to showcase the livestock. The Sheep were being shown, sheered and were talking amongst themselves as we walked around the pens admiring them.

I found that the sheep looked really relaxed and seemed to have more fun staring at us

This little guy kept smiling at me watching him

While the livestock contest was going on to a huge crowd, I toured the Crafts stalls. In the Summer for the fair, this was full of cows and goats, it now had all sorts of wool vendors, knit items, handcrafts and cosmetic items.

The colorful wool items on display

These wool dragon sculptures I thought were really interesting

After the show was over, I decided to tour around Rhinebeck. I just wanted to take a quick walk around the downtown before I took a tour I had done a few years earlier at the St. James Church graveyard. Since I was Upstate, I figured I would do both the same day since the weather was nice.

I got to St. James Church in Hyde Park at 7:30pm so I had plenty of time. I had taken this tour back in 2021 just as everything had opened up and it was a lot of fun, plus I wanted to update my pictures of the church and the graveyard. It also gave me time to talk to the docents and get some background on the church.

St. James Church before twilight at 6:15pm

The staff was just setting up the lights at the cemetery (technically a graveyard)

The inside of St. James Church in Hyde Park, NY, parish of the Roosevelt family

https://www.facebook.com/stjameshydepark/

https://www.dutchess.org/events/st_james_historic_graveyard_tours

My review on TripAdvisor:

I got to the church an hour before my tour and just relaxed and admired the beauty of the church. I never saw an hour fly by before my tour started. Then darkness came and my tour started.

Darkness came by 7:30pm and the cemetery looked much different

We started the lantern tour with a talk of the spirits who were buried in the grave yard. Each of the actors was waiting for us at each stop. I still could not believe these actors were waiting alone in the dark in a graveyard for people to walk by the them.

Each of the actors told their tales of when they were living and stood beside the place that they were buried. It was very intriguing.

The first person we met was Mrs. Emma Victoria Pitkin Marshal

Mrs. Marshall was once known as the ‘Poet Laureate’ of Dutchess County. She was well known in the world of publishing.

The second spirit I met was Mrs. Harper, Mrs. Mill’s housekeeper up at the Staatsburgh mansion. She told us the story of her life working for the Mills and Livingston families.

Mrs. Catherine Kennedy Harper

Mrs. Harper told us about her life working for the Livingston family and her relationship with Ruth, who she was her nanny and then housekeeper.

Our conversation with Mrs. Harper

Our next spirit we visiting was the ghost of Gertrude ‘Gerdie’ Livingston who talked about her time in the Hudson River Valley and in New York City.

Gertrude ‘Gertie’ Livingston

Mrs. Livingston telling her tales of the Hudson River Valley

In between our conversations with the spirits of the past, we walked through the graveyard as twilight gave way to darkness. The graveyard was illuminated with lanterns and lights to follow the paths. It is easy to trip over a tombstone while you are walking around the paths. They did give us lanterns to light the way but there were not enough to go around.

The vaults are illuminated at night to follow the ghostly trail

Our next with the spirits was the ghost of Reverend John McVickar, who was the Rector at St. James Church starting in 1811. He married Eliza Bard, the daughter of Dr. Samuel Bard of Bard College and raised their nine children together.

The spirit of Reverend John McVickar telling his tales of his life in the church

Walking past the church at night

The last apparition we met that night was the spirit of Mr. Augustus C. Colman, the son of a sailing captain who invested heavily in Manhattan real estate on the advice of his boss. John Jacob Astor.

The spirit of Mr. Colman telling his tales of the City

Both himself and the Reverend went at it in the graveyard

The stained glass windows at the church

The church at the end of the tour

I decided to head home after the tour via the Kingston Bridge and drive into downtown Kingston, NY for dinner. I stopped at my favorite go to restaurant in The ‘Stockade District’ Wing Shui at 53 North Front Street. The food is consistently wonderful and extremely reasonable and you can sit down inside the restaurant.

Wing Shui Chinese Restaurant at 53 North Street in Kingston, NY

https://wingshuikingston.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g48003-d822310-Reviews-Wing_Shui_Chinese_Restaurant-Kingston_Catskill_Region_New_York.html?m=69573

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

I was surprisingly hungry even after the big burger at lunch. It got cooler that evening so I ordered the Wonton Soup, the Steamed Dumplings and one of their wonderful eggrolls. It was such a great meal and really warmed me up. For such a small hole in the wall restaurant/take out place, the food is excellent.

My dinner that evening at Wing Shui

The Wonton Soup had for large wontons that you could barely fit in your mouth in the rich chicken broth. That warmed up after a graveyard walk in the dark.

The Wonton Soup with the oversized Wontons and rich chicken broth

The steamed dumplings were plump and moist and filled with spiced pork mixture.

The dumplings here are delicious

Their egg rolls are always a treat and are the first thing that I ever tried here years ago.

The egg rolls here are excellent

Yum!

I was nice to sit in the restaurant and just warm up. The temperature really dropped that evening and it was a rather cool October in comparison to other years. There is nothing like Chinese food after a long walk in a graveyard.

After dinner, I walked around Downtown Kingston some more and admired some of the decorations and store windows decorated for the holidays. It seems like Halloween is now the lead into Christmas rather than Thanksgiving (some places have already decorated for Christmas).

The ‘Jack Pumpkin’ decoration that looked like it out of “The Nightmare before Christmas” in Downtown Kingston, NY

https://andnorth.com/kingston-downtown

From “Nightmare before Christmas”

A lot of windows were decorated for the Halloween holidays. The merchants in Downtown Kingston are so creative and here are some of my favorites.

This was displayed in the window on a North Front Street store.

The faceless entities in the windows

They face this witches hat

The skulls and pumpkins in the window. The merchants get quite creative at the holidays in the downtown area.

The Thursday before my birthday, we had a special late night at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and I finally got to tour the new Rockefeller Wing of the museum. After almost three years and COVID, the galleries have been mounted. The Oceania and African collections had been remounted with a new layout and pieces of the collection that had been in storage had been brought out. The collection looked a brighter and you could appreciate the art better.

I just needed an evening in the City to clear my head before my official birthday and I figured a night at The Met would help. It was nice to finally see these works again after several years of hiding. The galleries looked so much nicer and the works brighter and more vibrant.

The new Rockefeller Wing at the Met:

https://www.metmuseum.org/hubs/the-michael-c-rockefeller-wing

The Oceania collection now redone

The mythic statuary

Pieces from the African collection

Some of the unique pieces in the case

Faces that make a statement

Artwork that reminds you of the Halloween holidays

After I left the Met for the evening, I walked through the Upper East Side neighborhoods west of Madison Avenue and the creativity of the brownstone neighborhoods rivaled anything in that suburbs.

Walking on the Upper East Side before Halloween:

The Pumpkin glare

Black cats and Witches

From twilight to darkness, I walked all the side streets to see how people decorated. There were some very clever displays.

Outside of the grocery store

Then it got dark and the real magic began

Just at twilight

I walked down the Upper East Side from East 79th Street to East 60th Street from Madison to Third Avenues. It depended on the block but some streets were really competitive. These are the best displays I saw.

Guarding a building

Creatures that bump in the night

Halloween land

The doorway

The Headless Horseman

Guarding ghosts

Jolly pumpkins

I loved this ghoul guarding the house

I just hoped he didn’t come to life

Skeleton Parade

Ghostly lights

A happy ghost

More jolly pumpkins

The elaborate Halloween Kingdom

The Evil Witch guarding the house

Here is the witch explaining her wicked ways

More ghouls guarding the homes

A Christmas Halloween

From both angles

Boo!

Last year I did the ‘luxury’ birthday with dinner at Perrine at the Pierre Hotel and Afternoon Tea at the Lowell Hotel on top of my haircut at York Barber, and my trips to the Central Park Zoo and the Met. This year I was just content with staying home and relaxing. I have been doing nothing but running around from one thing to another in between classes.

Maricel asked me what I wanted on my birthday this year and I said ‘rest’. Having over a hundred students between three classes at various stages of their classes can be daunting for anyone especially for me. I had done the whole luxury birthday thing last year and on my birthday this year, it poured so badly during the day that I just stayed home and crashed. I stayed home and watched Michigan State get crushed by UCLA. That was rough!

For my birthday dinner that night, I kept it low key and went to Sofia’s, a Greek restaurant in Hasbrouck Heights. It was perfect because it was relaxing that night and the food was excellent.

Sofia’s at 220 Boulevard in Hasbrouck Heights, NJ

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46497-d3468322-Reviews-Sofia_s_Mediterranean_Grill-Hasbrouck_Heights_New_Jersey.html?m=69573

For dinner I had the Shrimp Saganaki, which is a shrimp appetizer which is cooked in a tomato sauce and topped with cheese. I have loved this dish since they first opened.

The Shrimp Saganski appetizer

It is as delicious as it sounds

For dinner, I had the Gyro sandwich, which they put on their freshly made pita’s. Their sandwiches are delicious and they do not skimp on anything. I really enjoyed my meal.

My birthday dinner, the Gyro sandwich

For dessert, I had a change from the $35.00 slice of pink Dior cake at the Lowell and indulged in a slice of Baklava at Sofia’s, who much they make homemade and in house.

The Baklava at Sofia’s served as my birthday cake this year

This sweet cinnamon indulgence has layers of flaky and sugary phyllo and nuts and lots of honey. The perfect way to end the meal and the cap to my birthday dinner.

The next day Maricel took me out for a breakfast birthday at the IHOP in Hasbrouck Heights. I had not been there in a long time (and was a little shocked at the prices on the menu). I was just expecting pancakes, but Maricel knows me well enough and made the morning even more special. She greeted me with balloons. Turning 60 seemed to be a bigger deal to her than it was to me.

Maricel greeting me at IHOP on my 60th birthday

It is amazing how something as simple as this could mean so much. I love when my friends just do the simple things that touch me so much.

Now for people who say they do not like IHOP, you have never been to the one in Hasbrouck Heights. Their food and service is consistent and delicious. I have been coming here for years and have never once had a bad meal there. I love breakfast and could eat it all day long.

I had the “Two for Two” with two pancakes, two French Toast, two sausage and bacon and they even through in a side of toast. Talk about a perfect breakfast.

My birthday breakfast at IHOP at 111 Route 17 South in Hasbrouck Heights, NJ

https://restaurants.ihop.com/en-us/nj/hasbrouck-heights/breakfast-111-route-17-south-4667

https://restaurants.ihop.com/en-us/nj/hasbrouck-heights/

https://www.facebook.com/p/IHOP-Hasbrouck-Heights-100069442775972/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46497-d620307-Reviews-IHOP_Hasbrouck_Heights-Hasbrouck_Heights_New_Jersey.html?m=69573

You can’t beat a breakfast like this

You cannot beat IHOP’s pancakes!

The staff got caught up in the excitement of our meal and came over to sing “Happy Birthday” to me and brought me a dish of Vanilla ice cream with a candle in it. I was really touched. Sometimes the simplest things people do are the most touching.

The staff at IHOP really made the morning special with kind words, a nice song and their delicious Vanilla ice cream treat! That is good customer service!

This is what a best friend is for!

She saved the best for last and gave me a birthday present. Folks, I hate getting presents! Everyone always gets me what they like and never what I like. I always have to fake a smile and my older brother says I am the worst at it.

Maricel surprised me with a Hermes gift pack of Verte cologne, which is my favorite. I used it for years at Macy’s and Tiffany’s when I could afford it. I swear she totally surprised me. I told her she ‘nailed the birthday and made it perfect!” I love when people can read me.

Maricel by the balloons

After my birthday surprise, I took turning 60 with a badge of honor. When I look at my grandparents at my age, they always so much older to me. I guess it was just the times and their life experiences. They had it so much rougher than I did and I am always grateful to them from what I can remember of the love and support they had for us when we were little. With the exception of my father’s mother, none of them lived into my adult hood.

October also meant Midterms, Team Projects and Term Papers, which some of my students just could not handle. It was a struggle in each class to get the students to do their homework. Let’s hope they get to the finish line on December 17th.

My blog on the Bergen County Firemen’s Home Association:

https://tbcfha.wordpress.com/

The grounds of the NJ State Firemen’s Home decorated for the Fall holidays

The next weekend, I was in Boonton for our quarterly Bergen County Firemen’s Home Association meeting. Both the outside and inside of the Firemen’s Home was decorated for the Halloween holidays. They really did a nice job with it. After the meeting and entertainment were over, I went up to visit Downtown Boonton to see how it was decorated for Halloween. They do such a good job. The town was decked out with ghosts and ghouls all over the Main Street.

The horrible ghoul in the center of downtown

The town was not decked out for the Halloween and Fall holidays. It was not just the Halloween holidays but the beauty of the change of seasons and the Fall foliage.

The Hill section of Boonton

The Hill section of the town in October

The beauty of the Victorian homes

Each street was so beautiful

The homes were the colors of gold, red and copper

The businesses did a nice job with the scarecrows this year. The ghosts and ghouls dotted the downtown.

The Annabelle doll

The ghouls are out

The cat in the hat

Pumpkin head

Mars Attacts outside a restaurant

This strange Teddy was outside the library

Boonton does a wonderful job of decorating during both the Halloween and Christmas holidays. The downtown is decorated with all sorts of interesting and creative artwork and beautiful lights. I recently walked around the Downtown at the start of the holiday season and it was really festive. I always get a kick out of the scarecrows decorating the town.

My blog on Exploring Downtown Boonton (a very unique downtown):

https://mywalkinmanhattan.com/tag/exploring-downtown-boonton/

The fire department, even after I retired after 19 years, still keeps me busy. We had our Fire Department Relief Association meeting the night of ‘Halloween in the Park’ and after our meeting was over at 7:30pm, I headed over to Woodland Park in our town and watched everyone get on hay wagons and ride around Woodland Park being chased by ghosts and ghouls. I do not think I have attended this since before COVID. “Halloween in the Park” is an event our town sponsors that bring hay wagons thorough Woodland Park’s small bundles of trees and woods and scares them with costume characters.

It used to be spookier but when neighboring town, Wood Ridge, built a series of condos on the border of our towns and they took down all the trees on their side of the park, all you see is the windows of condos at the back of the park. Still, its a lot of fun and residents get a kick out it.

Woodland Park in Hasbrouck Heights, NJ at night

Halloween starts for me in Hasbrouck Heights with the town’s Annual Halloween in the Park, an event that takes place each fall in Woodland Park in Hasbrouck Heights. First thing to note that since developers have built new condos on the parks edges, it has taken some of the allure from the park. You can see the lights and people moving around.

We ‘stand by’ with the fire department for lights for the event and emergency calls when we have to leave. Still it is a lot of fun watching everyone get on the hayrides and start screaming in the distance. We watch from the equipment while eating a pizza dinner which we share with our Ambulance Squad who is on hand incase someone gets hurt. The last ride of the night, we get to go on when everyone else has left.

Patrons waiting at the Pavillion

The fireplace roaring at the event

Ghouls waiting for you

The park decorated for Halloween

The DPW takes families around the park in hayride fashion with bales of hay in the trailers and everyone on the trailer is chased and harassed by various ghosts, ghouls and witches. You spend most of the evening being chased with someone with a knife or chainsaw.

The start of the haunted hayride

Video of Halloween in the park

Ghouls and creatures of the night chasing everyone

This popular event is always sold out and residents get such a kick out of it. I of course was working that night and got there in time for the last two rides and people were still screaming at 9:30pm.

Halloween in the Park in Hasbrouck Heights, NJ in Woodland Park

I did more traveling down the shore to see what was happening in both Point Pleasant and Seaside Heights beaches. The boardwalks were decorated for the holidays and there were scarecrow contests and pumpkin carving on the Boardwalks. The day started off sunny but then a giant cloud came over the towns which did not clear until 4:00pm. Just as I was leaving, the sun came out again.

Both Seaside Heights and Park and Point Pleasant and Point Pleasant Beach are getting more active during the Fall Holidays as more people have moved down the shore permanently. There are a lot of events for kids and their families families to participate in.

When I visited Seaside Park and Seaside Heights, I stopped in just after a Scarecrow Making Contest. The contest was already over by the time I got there but people were still looking them over. The kids did a really nice job with the contest. While Seaside Heights and Park don’t have the activities that its northern neighbor Point Pleasant has, the activities led to some creative ingenuity of the kids and there were interesting decorations all over the towns over the Halloween weekend.

The Scarecrow Contest in October 2025

The Scarecrows lined up

Some of the Scarecrows I liked

This one stood out

This jolly creature stood out too

The strange scared scarecrows

The town even decorated the Boardwalk more this year with skeletons and other creatures. There were not many activities on the Boardwalk on the Halloween weekend but the decorations were fun. Even on this warm afternoon at the shore, it put me in the Halloween spirit.

Skeletons on the Boardwalk

Zombies on the Boardwalk

The Boardwalk was busy with people who had just participated in a Pumpkin carving contest. The weather was overcast by the late afternoon but most of the businesses on the Boardwalk were open and there was a choice of places to eat and shop along the way. The two bars were packed with people who were watching the Giants game. I big change from when I was in Cape May and it is all Philly fans.

My full blog on Visiting both Seaside Heights and Seaside Park:

After my visit to Seaside Heights and debating on where I wanted to go to lunch, I drove up the coastal highway through the other beach communities to Point Pleasant and Point Pleasant Beach. The downtown arts community always knows how to decorate the downtown and Jenkinson’s does a nice job on the Boardwalk.

When I visited Downtown Point Pleasant, I was able to admire the decorations on both the downtown Main Street and then walk to the Boardwalk. The downtown is always so nicely decorated and I love the whimsical scarecrows that decorate the downtown. The windows are filled with creative displays that always seem to be begging for Christmas decorations even before Halloween is even over (like most stores everyone wants to rush the holidays).

Downtown Point Pleasant in the Fall of 2025

The Point Beach Arts community gets very creative in Downtown Point Pleasant with the Gazebo decorated for Halloween

https://www.facebook.com/PointBeachArts/

https://arts.pointpleasantbeach.org/events/scarecrow-contest-2025

The Winners:

https://www.instagram.com/pointbeacharts/?hl=en

The bat stares at you

The Scarecrow in the Gazebo

I walked their downtown and saw that their Arts Commission added more scarecrows to the downtown light posts.

The scarecrows from 2025

Another creative scarecrow

There was a lot of creativity in this downtown contest

The scarecrows came in all styles

Barbie display

The Phantom bride

More unusual scarecrows

They get very creative in Downtown Point Pleasant

When I walked to the Boardwalk a couple of blocks away, it was a little cooler than last year but there was still a good crowd walking around the Boardwalk. The afternoon activities sponsored by Jenkinson’s kept everyone active with their series of programs at “Boo at the Boardwalk”. They decorated the Boardwalk for the Halloween Holidays and kept all the stores and restaurants open adding to the festivities. With the Fall holidays getting warmer, it is a smart business decision to extend the Summer activities further into Fall.

‘Boo on the Boardwalk’ in 2025

https://jenkinsons.com/boo-at-the-boardwalk-2025-at-jenkinsons-boardwalk

Decorations on the Boardwalk in 2025

Limited rides and attractions were open that day

There were decorations all around the Boardwalk

These signs were all over the Boardwalk

The declarations on the Boardwalk on Halloween

The Boardwalk was busy Halloween weekend of 2025

Halloween is always fun on the Jenkinson Boardwalk. There was always something going on. The towns really get into the Halloween holidays. The park really knows how to celebrate the holidays.

My blog on Exploring both Point Pleasant Beach and Point Pleasant:

https://mywalkinmanhattan.com/category/walking-downtown-point-pleasant-nj/

https://mywalkinmanhattan.com/category/exploring-point-pleasant-beach-nj/

It was a lot of running around the shore from Boardwalk to Boardwalk but it is interesting the amount of activities these towns have been doing and the creativity that goes into them. This led me to visiting another shore town the next week when I visited Long Beach Island the Town of Beach Haven.

It was rather quiet in town when I visited Beach Haven the week before Halloween. Usually there was a lot more going on but it was probably reserved for the weekends. Some parts of the of the town were decorated for the holidays but I did not see the activities of the other shore towns that day. Still there were reminders of Halloween here and there throughout the town.

Woo Hoo at 211 South Bay Avenue

https://thewoohoo.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46292-d7646259-Reviews-The_Woohoo-Beach_Haven_Long_Beach_Island_New_Jersey.html?m=69573

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

My first stop was Woo Hoo at 211 South Bay Avenue for some ice cream. The store was all decorated for the holiday, and they even had a specialty ice cream flavor for Halloween, Spooky S’mores. The ice cream here is a real treat as it is made in small batches on premise.

Woo Hoo carries some non -ice cream merchandise

They have now cut the menu down to just ice cream. There is no longer any ‘meal’ items like sandwiches and fries. The woman at the window explained, they will be only the homemade ice cream on their menu. I had no problem with that. Woo Hoo was preparing for the Halloween and the shop was decorated for the holidays.

Games for kids

They decorated the interiors

The store was surrounded by ghosts and ghouls

I looked over the menu and I saw a flavor I remembered from the past, Spooky S’mores, which I had when I visited the island a few years ago for Halloween. It is a Marshmallow Ice Cream with a Chocolate swirl with graham crackers and Halloween M&Ms and you only see it at this time of the year. I had to have that.

The Spooky S’mores flavor

It was delicious

The Spooky S’mores was loaded with graham and M&Ms in every bite and the ice cream was so rich and creamy. Going to Woo Hoo at the holidays is the best!

They now have ice Cream making classes

The service could not be friendlier. The staff is very accommodating and will help you make a selection from the various choices. Not only that but the staff knows the island really well and can point things out for you to see.

I spent the rest of the afternoon exploring Beach Haven, walking through the stores and amusements areas which were still open this late into October. The warm weather over the weekend really attracted a lot of people and watching people play miniature golf this late into the season was interesting. The shore towns in New Jersey really are going full season.

Beach Haven Bay during the day

It was a nice snack to enjoy after walking on the beach or exploring the island. I walked down the block at the end of Dock Road and enjoyed the views and watched the boats sail by. I also got a great tan.

Beach Haven, NJ by the bay is just beautiful

Just sitting by the bay relaxing

Admiring the boats while I digested

The creative artwork by the shore

It was fun to just walk around Beach Haven’s downtown that afternoon and enjoy the warm weather. They had a Chowder Cook off going on down the road, so the town was packed with people that afternoon.

My blog on Exploring Long Beach Island and Beach Haven, NJ:

I saw by the weather report that Hurricane Melissa was coming up the coast and I knew that this would knock the foliage down all over the state so I made one last trip down the Route 46 Budd Lake to the Delaware Water Gap. I started at the Delaware Water Gap to take the pictures of the foliage in the sunshine and then I worked my way back, stopping at farms along the way and in Hackettstown to take more pictures. I wanted to get the pictures of the foliage before the storm knocked it all down.

The Delaware Water Gap at River Road off Route 209 in 2025

https://www.nps.gov/dewa/index.htm

I was able to stop at the U turn on Route 80 West and park in the beginning of the trails that go through the park. Since it was so gloomy out and it was getting late in the afternoon, I stuck by the Visitors Center, which was closed for the season and walked along the river. Most of the foliage had been knocked off the trees by the two recent storms but there were still hues of gold and yellow with the trees that were left. It is a breathtaking view of the mountain range.

The foliage from the highway

When I returned in October of 2025, I timed it so that the trees would be at their peak and it was before a major rain storm the next day. I figured this would be the best time to come. Plus it was going to be the last nice day of that week. The trees were just past peak but because there had not been much rain that summer, the leaves changed earlier than in past years.

The mountains at the Delaware Water Gap from the Visitors Center in the Summer months

https://www.nationalparks.org/connect/explore-parks/delaware-water-gap-national-recreation-area

The Gap in the Fall of 2025

The Visitors Center in the Fall of 2025

The river in the Fall of 2025

I continued my path down Route 46 East, taking pictures of foliage and stopping at the Marshall Farms to see the Halloween decorations. Sometimes you will pass a farm stand and you see the standard pumpkins, peaches and apples outside. When you pass Marshall’s Farm Stand in Delaware, NJ, you see a whole farm experience with orchards of fruit, corn fields and a property that is decorated for the upcoming Halloween holidays.

The side of the Marshall’s Farm Stand at 114 Route 46

http://www.marshallsfarmmarket.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46387-d3571725-Reviews-Marshall_s_Farm_Market-Delaware_New_Jersey.html

My review on LittleShoponMainStreet@Wordpress.com:

The other side of the farm stand stocked high with pumpkins

The festive pumpkin sat on the roof of the building

The whole front of the farm was stocked with all sorts of early Fall produce, honey, jams and jellies and delicious baked goods including pies, cakes and rolls and their specialty, their mini Apple Cider doughnuts.

The fresh Jersey produce

The cream rolls and homemade pies, including apple, berry and Shoo Fly pies

The best is their mini Apple Cider doughnut. One bag of these and you are content for the afternoon. I can barely get out of the parking lot with indulging in one or two of them before my drive down Route 46 to the Delaware Water Gap.

The farm stands addictive Apple Cider doughnuts

These sugary delights are so good!

What I also enjoy is their delicious apple cider. I found out though that they do not make it in house but a farm close by makes it both for their farm and Marshall’s. It is sweet and very refreshing and only comes in gallon containers.

I love walking through the stand, walking past the pumpkin, produce and the crafts display.

The pumpkin display in the parking lot

After I put my purchases in the car, I walked around the farm, looking at all the decorations they had for the upcoming Halloween holidays. The farm has pumpkin picking, corn mazes and a hayride where the $5.00 cost includes along with the hayride a cup of apple cider and a doughnut. I could handle that.

The sign for the weekend hayrides

The witch sign in the parking lot near the Corn Maze

The witch painting at the start of the corn mazes

Ghosts decorating the field

The Corn Maze was still tall and green and I am sure led all around the property. Each part of the front part of the farm was decorated for Halloween festivities which would happen the next weekend.

The cemetery in the back of the farm stand

A horrible ghoul

All the Halloween decorations at the start of the hayride

Here is my blog on the whole trip down Route 46 East and West from Budd Lake to the Delaware Water Gap:

Hurricane Melissa came up the coast the week of Halloween and a lot of functions were either cancelled or had to move inside. I had no desire to go into the City when it was pouring rain. So I missed some of the museum and Central Park events that had been cancelled and stayed home. We really lucked out on Halloween night, and the weather was a brisk 58 degrees. It was clear and the perfect night for the parade. The parade this year went off without a hitch. I got to the parade after a long day at work and I made it into the City by 4:00pm.

We started the sign in for volunteers at 4:00pm

I met my counterparts at the start of the shift and I really lucked out. We had a really good group of people who would answer ‘no’ to people. I was able to see a little bit of the puppet rehearsals before people started to arrive for the event. There was a lot of excitement as everyone got ready to start the parade.

The puppets ate the beginning of the parade

Puppet rehearsal before the parade kick off at 7:00pm

I met many creatures, witches and things that go bump in the night at the beginning of the parade and they enjoyed showing themselves off.

This Sea Maiden joined us at the beginning of the parade

This group of friendly witches and warlocks joined the parade early

As the sun went down and the parade was about to begin, balloon creatures joined as the Good Witch led the way. The parade of costumed characters was in full swing by 5:30pm as people entered the gates for the parade.

The Good Witch with the balloon creatures

The Good Witch with the insect

Even Frankenstein joined the parade

Moon creatures joined this Witch of Darknes

Ghosts and ghouls with balloons

Then the parade start was getting closer between 5:30pm and 7:00pm, it got crazy at the gate and people tried every which way to get into the gate. I kept and to talk and finally yelling at people to keep it organized. I swear I have never seen adults act like little children. We have more people try to sneak through the gate with every excuse. I have learned to put my foot down and it is by pass only.

Then the golden hour of 7:00pm came and the parade started. As the floats were heading uptown, people were still scrambling, trying to get in. At 8:00pm, this woman walks up to the gate one hour into the parade and tells me she was here as a volunteer. I told her we were closed at that point and have a nice night and see her next year. It amazes me how people use excuses to get in.

Watching the parade from inside

We finally closed the gate at 8:30pm and the police took over security from there. I was able to walk in and watch where the parade begins. It is always interesting to see how the parade works and how this organized.

Watching the parade progress uptown from the sidelines

The chutes where the floats come out combined with the number of costumed people is carefully done and I have never seen so many people marching in the parade. Later on, someone told me the police were turning people away because too many people were showing up.

The parade from Dominick Street heading uptown

I could not believe how crazy it got in the park as the parade progressed. I have to give the guys who are the volunteers who coordinate the parade so much create. They do an amazing job. They really are worth their weight in gold.

More of the floats heading uptown

The video shows the true magic that goes into the parade from behind the scenes

The last of the floats heading uptown

The last of the floats start to head uptown by 9:00pm and after that, it is all costumed people, not just New Yorkers but people from all over the world who had come to walk our unique parade.

People walking uptown in full drag

The weather cooperated and their was an over flow of people marching and enjoying the parade

The costumers enjoying themselves

I loved the creativity of the costumes

The last of the floats heading uptown

I loved these costumes. The headless guy was pretty gruesome

A better look at the headless Spector

The last of the floats heading uptown

The last of the floats starting uptown before the costumers took over

I left the parade route and walked through the parade to get to at least 8th Street before I veered off on to Seventh Avenue. I walked uptown to join some of the volunteers after the parade for dinner.

Walking through the Village and looking at the decorated windows and homes

Some of the private homes are so beautifully decorated in Greenwich Village

Another great decorated home in Greenwich Village

The West Elm right next to the restaurant on West 12th street

I am sorry but to decorate your store to the hilt on Halloween night is really rushing the holidays. They did this the year before as well. Who ever heard of looking at a Christmas tree on Halloween night?

Still the store looked gorgeous and their visual people did a marvelous job

It was nice to sit down to dinner that night. I was starved rushing from work to the City and then to the parade route. I did not get to eat anything and was famished.

Joining friends for dinner at Da Umbertos at 107 West 17th Street

https://daumbertonyc.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d423279-Reviews-Da_Umberto-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=69573

It was nice to meet some of my counterparts and swap stories about the parade.

Meeting with friends for dinner that night

The restaurant had a wonderful buffet that evening

The Penne Vodka and Sautéed Shrimp were wonderful

The dinner I enjoyed was wonderful

After dinner and some wonderful conversation, I said my goodbyes. I had been going strong since 4:30am that morning and was beginning to run out of steam. I just wanted to head home and go to bed.

I decide to walk back to the Port Authority from the restaurant since it was such a beautiful night. The weather really cooperated and it was a crisp and beautiful night.

Even the Empire State Building was decorated for the holiday

I was lucky that I walk fast. I made the 11:50pm bus out of Manhattan and got home by 12:30am. It had been a long night. The night was still young and I still did not see the spirits of the night except parading up Sixth Avenue.

Even when I reached Hasbrouck Heights, the decorations were still up and lit. It was nice to see that holiday spirit strong in town.

The houses were still lit and decorated when I got home

Residents love to decorate their homes in Hasbrouck Heights

It always amazes me of homeowners creativity

Post Halloween:

There were still traces of Halloween even after the holidays. Stores and homeowners kept their displays up but the lure of Christmas and the warm weekend meant that people started to take things down so the Christmas declarations could go up.

I went down to Mill’s Bakery to check out their Halloween treats and there was still some things left. The sweetest things were available in all the bakery cases.

The front of Mill’s Bakery at 275 Valley Boulevard in Wood Ridge, NJ

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46937-d4735011-Reviews-Mills_Bakery-Wood_Ridge_New_Jersey.html?m=69573

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

I loved the festive Frankenstein cake. Talk about creative!

The festive and creative cupcakes

The fun loving cupcakes

I loved the Halloween cookies and a little pricy at $5.00 each but were well worth it. I bought a few for snacks.

The mummy cookie was so good!

So was the Pumpkin

The ghost was good too!

Mill’s Bakery does such a good job at any holiday

I took my cookies and went back to Downtown Hasbrouck Heights to tour the window paintings from the contest a week earlier. The sweetness of the cookies gave me a sugar rush.

Walking in Downtown Hasbrouck Heights for the Halloween holidays

Downtown Hasbrouck Heights was still decorated for the Halloween holidays with festive window displays and the kids window paintings from the recent Window Painting contest.

Some of the window painting downtown

These kids are so creative

The weekend of Halloween (Halloween fell on Friday night this year), I took my best friend, Maricel to the “Pumpkin Blaze” on Croton on the Hudson, NY. I go to this annual event as part of my membership to Historical Hudson Valley. I love walking through the old Van Cortlandt Estate and seeing the creativity of the carvings and displays.

The entrance to the Pumpkin Blaze

https://www.instagram.com/pumpkinblaze/?hl=en

We started off early and had dinner at one of my favorite Chinese restaurants that I feature on my blog, DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com, Dong Happy Gardens at 440 South Riverside Avenue in the ShopRite Mall. The food and service are excellent and the family who run it are really nice.

https://hudsonvalley.org/explore-area/listing/listing/dong-happy-garden

https://donghappygarden.restaurants-us.com/menu#google_vignette

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g47560-d4616434-Reviews-Dong_Happy_Garden-Croton_on_Hudson_New_York.html?m=69573

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

I love the food here. It is white tablecloth quality for a small take out place in a strip mall.

I had the Orange Chicken with Pork Fried Rice and an egg roll and Maricel had the same with but with Barbecue Spareribs. I can’t tell you how wonderful the food is in this tiny take out place but you have to try it for yourself. I have never had a bad meal here.

The Orange Flavored Chicken with Pork Fried Rice is excellent

Then we shared some Panfried Pork Dumplings. They really hit the spot on a cool night.

The Panfried Dumplings were a nice addition to dinner

Dinner was a chance for us to catch up and talk. So much has been happening in our lives and we never get a chance to talk.

After dinner, we headed over to the ‘Blaze’ and then the fun began. The parking lot was packed with people and the weather really cooperated. It was cool but not cold and walking through the pathways was nicer than we thought.

The Spider display

A close up shot of the spider

Maricel in front of the rainbow flag that was on display at the entrance of the displays

We started our tour through the Blaze walking through the rows of pumpkin carvings. I noticed there were less of them this year than in years in the past. Still there was some interesting pumpkins.

The first row of carvings I thought were interesting

An interesting face

Another interesting face

The Haunted Pumpkin Windmill

Frog swimmer

The Pumpkin Octopus

Visiting the Hudson River Sites

Pumpkin sling shot

Me in front of the Statue of Liberty sculpture

The Statue of Liberty sculpture

Walking through the Light Tunnel

Maricel and I in the Tunnel of Lights

This is the experience you get when you walk through the Tunnel of Lights

Then we reached the Van Cortlandt Manor, home to the Van Cortlandt family. The house had been closed for years for touring since the renovation but been open for the Blaze.

The cemetery was moved from here to earlier in the tour with a Circus in its place.

The ‘Under the Big Top‘ pumpkin sculpture

The beauty of the Van Courtlandt Manor at night

The Wonderful Lightshow at the manor house

We then toured the amusement area. The Merry Go Round with its eerie sounds and glowing pumpkins made it foreboding.

The eerie Merry Go Round

The Merry Go Round

Maricel though it would be more cheerful with a picture of me

We then looked over the Halloween Circus train that passed us by. I loved looking at all the Circus animals.

The Haunted Circus Train

My video of the Circus Train

We then walked through the end of the display with all sorts of ghosts and ghouls that included a Pumpkin man and the Headless Horsemen.

The Headless Horseman

Chasing poor Ichabod Crane

The evil Pumpkin man showed himself towards the end of the tour

The end of the tour looking back at the lights and displays. There were all sorts of lit pumpkins as we exited the tour.

This was my favorite

Me at the end of the Pumpkin Blaze with one of the flying monkey’s behind me.

It may have been a Halloween with less activities and far less running around but it was far better than my years of Trick of Treating as a kid! Yuck!

Happy Halloween everyone! Until next year!

Boo!

The eerie evening and holiday had now passed

Happy Halloween! Here comes Christmas…….

Day Three Hundred and Twenty Seven The Forth Annual Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association Halloween House and Merchant Decorating Contest October 31st, 2024

It was a banner year in ‘Haunted Hasbrouck Heights’ as a record number of Hasbrouck Heights residents decorated their homes for what has now become the start of the Holiday season. ‘In our town of Halloween’ we searched for the best ghosts and ghouls and things that go bump in the night to find the best house and merchant that best represents the spirit of the Halloween holidays. This is my forth year as the Chairman of the Hasbrouck Heights Halloween House Decorating Contest and I have never seen so much creativity in our town.

We found that our winners were two members of the community that had been winners in previous contests, who really stepped up their game and created displays that dazzled the judges unanimously, Heights Floral Shoppe for a third straight year and the Fiduccia family of 85 Woodside Avenue for a second year since winning two years ago. The judges were blown away by their creativity and ingenuity in creating such fantastic displays.

Our Merchant Division is starting to grow with more of our Downtown merchants decorating their windows for the Halloween season. We wish more would get involved but the clear winner is now a three time winner with not just the most amazing windows but interior as well.

The Heights Flower Shoppe dazzles during day and night

‘I love Halloween,” owner Ray Vorisek said. “We like to use our creativity in the windows. I am always adding on and looking for new things for the display. We have been so busy lately that we were not able to finish adding some of the newer pieces for the store.”

The witches, goblins and ghosts in the display at Heights Flower Shoppe

The windows were decorated with flying witches and beasts smiling on their journeys while a howling wicked witch of the west stood guard in the front of the store. The interior was a wonderland of Halloween decorations and candies perfect for any Halloween event and party.

The inside is decorated for a Halloween get together

The candy selection for you little goblins

The store both inside and out was decorated to the hilt with items for sale and the displays.

Three time winner Ray Vorisek with HHMA Halloween Chairman Justin Watrel

Winner and owner of Heights Flower Shoppe Ray Vorisek in front of his store.

Our runner up the year was Healing 4 the Soul, the gift shop and café that is one of the newer additions to our business district. The business is owned by residents Renee and Dawn Pikowski. The windows were simple and creative and elegant.

The enchanting windows of witches and pumpkins

The spiritual windows up close

“We love to decorate our windows,” said co-owner Nicole Pikowski “ we strive to be creative. You will always see different displays at each holiday.” The store was decorated with beautiful witches wishing everyone a Happy Halloween.

The inside of the Cafe for Healing 4 the Soul

The enchanting gifts at Healing 4 the Soul

There are a lot of lotions and potions and sweet treats to eat inside that are all handmade in house. The Halloween fragrances abound the store. More of our merchants got very creative this year and we are hoping to see more next year.

Chairman Justin Watrel presenting the Runner Up Merchant award to Co-Owner Renee Pikowski

HHMA Halloween Merchant Decorating Winner Renee Pikowski

In the House Decorating Division it was a difficult decision for judges who drove around many days both day and night to see the houses. Of all the wonderful houses we visited all over Hasbrouck Heights, one home was on the top of every list of each judge and that was 85 Woodside Avenue.

The Fiduccia family had been our winners in the Second Annual contest and stepped up their game by adding all sorts of new elements to the yard to be the winners again in 2024. The vote was unanimous amongst all five judges.

85 Woodside Avenue at night

These are some videos on the winning home’s video display that won the contest. These were amazing and so spooky:

Video of the display of the Archway in the yard:

Video of the window display on the second floor of the house:

Video on the yard and video displays:

Ghosts and ghouls lined the yard performing all sorts of interesting acts

Skeletons lined the yard awaiting the crowds of Trick or Treaters visiting on Halloween Night

The Fiduccia family in their family ‘skeleton’ costumes

The Fiduccia family with their second year win!

The display during the day was just as impressive as it is at night

Matt Fiduccia said that he really wanted to add new things to the display. “We found a lot of new items that became available and added them to the display. I created the arch for the ‘Ghostbuster-like video’. We added the projectors to the windows on the second level of the house as well. There are a lot of new decorations on the market now for Halloween.”

The house not only had sculptures and mannequins of all types but creatures, skeletons and ghouls that lines the yard. In the archway in the front yard was a running video of apparitions from movies like ‘Ghostbusters’ and ‘Poltergeist’. In the upstairs windows of the home were running videos of desperate souls and violent blows. Each part of the house had its own storyline. It was a well-deserved win.

The Fiduccia family together with their second win for the Halloween House Decorating Contest

The Judges Marc Mancuso, Chairman Justin Watrel and Vinnie DeCicco from the Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association with winner Matt Fiduccia

With so many wonderful houses to choose from, the judges narrowed it down to three homes as the runners up. There were so many that we liked but each judge was asked to narrow it down to three and it was pretty much unanimous amongst the five of us. Just like the winner, the judges had a short list of the runners up and three homes captured our imagination.

The first two were previous runners up who upped their game and had extraordinary displays of creativity. One was at 36 Hamilton Avenue, the home of Alex, Laura and Scarlet Pena. The other was at 115 Ottawa Avenue the home of Dennis Hall. The displays were both intriguing and imaginative both during the day and night. Like the winners, everyone stepped up the decorations with lights and sound effects and added that special touch to their homes that made it stand out.

Our third was a house on the Hasbrouck Heights border in Lodi that captured the imagination of each judge at 236 Paterson Avenue. The house had a bevy of creatures displayed both in and out of the house. All the judges kept passing it at night so impressed by it we did not realize that it was on the border of Hasbrouck Heights in Lodi, NJ.

“My grandfather used to decorate his house and people used to travel to visit it, so I wanted to keep that tradition going,” said Runner up Jay Logan. “We keep dreaming up new ideas for the display and we keep adding to it.”

Jay and Ann Logan of Lodi were one of the three Runners up for the contest

“We didn’t even know that there was a contest going on,” said Anne Logan. “We live right on the border of Hasbrouck Heights and Lodi, so we feel like we are part of both communities.” The Logan’s turned their display on and lit up and roared. The Logan’s are active members of both communities and were surprised and very excited about their win.

236 Paterson Avenue at night

The ghost and ghouls in front of 236 Paterson Avenue

236 Paterson Avenue during the day

Chairman Justin Watrel awarding the Logan’s their award.

At 26 Hamilton Avenue, Alex and Lauren Pena and their daughter, Scarlett added at lot to their and their display had more horrors in each section of the yard and house. “We have a lot of fun decorating on Halloween and everyone is impressed by the front yard display,” Lauren explained.

26 Hamilton Avenue was Runner Up last year as well

36 Hamilton winners Lauren and Scarlet Pena in front of their home with Chairman Justin Watrel

The Skeleton surgery in front of 26 Hamilton Avenue

36 Hamilton during the day

The mother and daughter Runner Up winners Lauren and Scarlet Pena

The last house on the Runner Up list was 115 Ottawa Avenue which had an honorable mention last year in the contest and has been noted on the list since the first year of the contest. Owner Dennis Hall accepted the Runner Up award with much excitement. “I love decorating the house for Halloween. The kids really seem to love it when they come here Trick or Treating. We are a very popular house. I added the sound effects and have several new pieces that I did not have time to put out for next year. You will have to come back next Halloween.”

115 Ottawa Avenue

115 Ottawa Avenue by the doorway

Runner Up and previous Honorable mention winner Dennis Hall Second next to his ghoulish display that was lit for the night of the presentation

115 Ottawa Avenue drinking the day

We want to thank all the members of the Hasbrouck Heights community for their wonderful displays and with a little extra decoration here and sound effect there can make a big difference in the judging.

I want to thank the judges in the contest Vinnie DeCicco and his kids, Ed Gumbrecht, Marc Mancuso, Joe Salib and his kids and Pat Fass and his daughter, Maggie. I also want to thank HHMA member Steve Feuss for creating the signs every year for the contest. This really makes it special for the winners to display their signs and awards on Halloween night.

I want to thank HHMA President Steve Palladino for all his support on this annual contest.

Happy Halloween everyone!

Boo!

Some of Honorariums that we thought were impressive:

House One 304 Roosevelt Avenue

House Two 344 Harrison Avenue

House Three 250 Cleveland Avenue

House Three 233 Passaic Avenue

House Four 155 Henry Street

House Five 10 Passaic Avenue

House Six 257 Henry Street, our first winner and Honorary House twice

257 Henry Street keeps getting more creative with new props

82 Burton Avenue has the same display every year but it is still interesting

House Seven-85 Woodside Avenue-our winner for Year Two

The Ghosts and Ghouls of 85 Woodside Avenue

The foliage in the late Fall in Hasbrouck Heights is just spectacular. I saw this tree when I was driving around Division Avenue. The sun hit it just right.

The town is so beautiful in the Fall

House Eight 226 Walter Avenue

House Nine 26 Hamilton Avenue one of our Runners Up last year

The skeletons doing surgery at 26 Hamilton Avenue with a Mad Doctor

House Ten 143 Kipp Avenue

House Eleven-510 Henry Street Last year’s winner

The horrible ghoul protecting the house at 510 Henry Street

Last year’s winner, Frank Blunda, welcomed us inside to see his Halloween paintings

I revisited some of our past winners at the end of the day as the sun went down to see the displays lit at night. It was mighty gruesome.

Winner of the first year 257 Henry Street

Winner of the second year 85 Woodside Avenue

Winner of the third year 510 Henry Street

We still had a lot more judging to do but our previous winners did a good job upping their game.

House Twelve 123 Washington Avenue

House Thirteen 42 Central Avenue-one of last year’s runners up

House Fourteen 117 Ottawa Avenue

House Fifteen 115 Ottawa Avenue-one of last year’s runner up

115 Ottawa Avenue really upped their game in 2024

House Sixteen 236 Paterson Avenue (we never realized this was in Lodi, NJ, the next town over that borders us)

236 Paterson Avenue was very impressive

House Seventeen Lots of inflatables but the monster on the porch was a horror at 219 Paterson Avenue

We thought she was pretty terrifying at 219 Paterson Avenue

House Eighteen 310 Bell Avenue

I hate evil clowns at 310 Bell Avenue

House Nineteen 118 Bell Avenue

It knows what scares you! at 118 Bell Avenue

House Twenty 533 Burton Avenue

House Twenty-One 219 Longworth Avenue

More evil clowns plotting their ways at 219 Longworth Avenue

House Twenty-One 446 Burton Avenue

House Twenty-Two 431 Kipp Avenue

Than you to all the residents of Hasbrouck Heights who captured the spirit of Halloween. We want you to know that we saw all of your homes and the amazing job you all did. Please keep it up and on Halloween night you might ‘get visited by three judges’ bearing ‘a treat’ for you with our annual award. Good luck in 2025!

In between exploring every street in town for the perfect home, we had to walk the Boulevard to look for the perfect business. I wish more businesses downtown would decorate for the holidays. The ones that did did a good job. What I enjoyed seeing was all the window painting that the kids did downtown. These kids are really talented.

Bill O’Shea’s Flower Shoppe with windows at 231 Boulevard

Bill O’Shea’s Flower Shoppe windows and painted windows

Some of the paintings just stood out

I thought this was clever

The Grooming Cove windows

The window painting at Heights Flower Shoppe

The Maki B Shushi windows

The windows snd the puppet outside the new Heights Burgers

I really liked this one

The IDesign windows

More fun paintings

More creative artwork

Things that are headless that. Reel and crawl

This was interesting

More headless things that go bump in the night

My across the street neighbors yard right before Halloween

Their maze of pumpkins decorated the lawn

Their pumpkin path filled with Jack-O-Lanterns beasts

The path of pumpkin people fascinated me

Then there is their evil scarecrow, Giggles, does mischievous things around the neighborhood when they are not looking. I still can’t find my garbage can lid!

The Legend of Giggles, the Scarecrow:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/15868

Day Two Hundred and Eighty-Four Halloween Returns Again October 1-31st, 2023

It has been hard since the Summer ended. I have a full load of classes at my college and being a full time student at NYU, it does not allow for much time to explore the City the way I want to on a daily basis. My walks now extend to and from Port Authority to the NYU campus on West 4th Street. I see a lot trust me and I have some of the most fantastic pictures of the brownstone neighborhoods of Chelsea and Greenwich Village but finishing the Theater District and Times Square is where I want to go to finish up that part of the City.

I will get back to my walk in Times Square soon.

It has been hard on Times Square with all the immigration coming into Manhattan and asylum seekers being housed in hotels in this area puts the police on guard again in this section of Manhattan and its tough to walk around and take pictures. I will probably have to wait until the Christmas break to walk this section of the City.

Halloween decorations in Greenwich Village.

Meanwhile, Halloween is here and it means all the running around from the City to the Hudson River Valley for events such as festivals, cemetery walks and haunted house visits. It also means all the Halloween events in Hasbrouck Heights including me running around town for the Third Annual “Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association Halloween House Decorating Contest” which has been growing every year. All of this happening while I am giving Midterms for my students and taking Midterms at NYU. I do not get much sleep in both October and December.

The Hasbrouck Heights Merchant Window Painting Contest was even delayed because of rain in 2023.

I had rained most every weekend of the month of October so that put a damper into the football games up at Yale in New Have with Cornell and Rutgers in New Brunswick with Michigan State. Cornell won the game in a torrent of rain and managed to break a six year drought against Yale. I missed not going up but the whole weekend was a washout. Rutgers was a complete disaster for Michigan State which is having one of its worst seasons on record. We lost our coach and it has been a spiral of lost opportunities and disappointments. Welcome to my sophomore year at Michigan State. We lost by three touchdowns in the fourth quarter in another rain storm. It keeps raining all the time.

The beginnings of Halloween in the Village the second week of October.

As the month has progressed the leaves finally started to change colors and we finally started to see the signs of Fall. As I walked through the brownstone blocks on my way to class at NYU, I started to see the beginnings of Halloween. People are really decorating this year in the Village. There is a real beauty to the Village when the Fall arrives and the homes are adorned with skeletons, ghosts and pumpkins. There are things that go bump in the night as well. It is really a thing of beauty.

Halloween means running around too. From place to another I like to experience different sites in the City, the Hudson River Valley and in New Jersey. As the leaves changed colors it made it even more spectacular but it much later in the month than usual. All that rain changed everything.

Store windows got very creative in Manhattan.

I went to Blairstown and Hope, New Jersey for Friday the 13th for the afternoon on October 13th and that is an experience. The weather finally broke and it was a sunny, spectacular day and the moment my online class was over, I bolted out of the house and headed to Blairstown where the original 1980 film was shot over forty years ago. Only the first twenty minutes of the opening of the film was shot in both Blairstown and Hope but people would be elbowing each other to get the picture in.

Downtown Blairstown, NJ on Friday the 13th

My blog on visiting Blairstown and Hope, NJ on Friday the 13th:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/38992

I got to Blairstown around 11:00am and I thought I would never get a parking spot. I parked at the edge of the downtown and walked around. Talk about perfect timing as people really had not arrived in town yet so it was perfect for picture taking. That would not be the case later in the afternoon when it really got busy. People were taking walking tours and there were two sold out showings of the original “Friday the 13th” film.

The Water Building on October 13th, 2023 is the most popular place to take pictures.

The famous walkway under the Water Building where Annie walked through.

The scenes where the towns of Blairstown and Hope, NJ were shot.

It is a fascinating experience to see all these fans of the original film running around to the locations where the opening scenes had taken place. All of the merchants had Friday the 13th merchandise and were also stocked for Halloween and Christmas. It was such a beautiful day outside it looked it was going to be a busy afternoon for everyone.

The Blairstown Diner was much easier to get into on January 13th early this year but on October 13th the lines were out the door all day. The food is really good here.

The Blairstown Diner at 55 NJ Route 94 is always busy on Friday the 13th

https://www.blairstowndiner.com/

I was looking for a late morning snack having gotten up so early for class and then getting on the road after class was over for the long drive. The Blairstown Diner was packed and had a line twenty deep as well as the coffee shop in the downtown area was also extremely busy that morning. So I walked around the downtown area and Blairstown does not have a lot of options for dining or at least a lot at that time of the morning.

Dale’s Market at 66 NJ 94 is a great place for breakfast and lunch to go.

While I was walking around I found Dale’s Market at 66 NJ 94 and they have an amazing prepared food section with hot food and sandwiches to go. I got their ‘Deputy’ breakfast sandwich with eggs, bacon, hash browns and hot sauce and took it to the park across the street for a morning picnic by the river. That was better than any restaurant.

That amazing breakfast sandwich “The Deputy” at Dale’s Market

Footbridge Park in Downtown Blairstown, NJ is a great place to have a picnic and relax from the crowds on Friday the 13th.

After walking around the downtown and seeing that the crowds were getting larger in Blairstown, I drove over to Hope, NJ to visit the Hope Historical Society Museum. I made an appointment at 1:30pm to see the inside of the museum and take pictures. The museum is rarely open so I had to take that opportunity when it came. It is a nice little museum that you should not miss.

The unique Hope Historical Society at 323 High Street in Downtown Hope, NJ

https://www.hopenjhistory.com/

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/6341

The museum was open for a tour that afternoon so I got in to take some interior shots. The museum misses out without having a special ‘Friday the 13th’ exhibition inside the museum but they do have private tours by appointment.

The inside of the Hope Historical Society

The inside of the Hope Historical Society

After visiting the museum, I headed off the to the Moravian Cemetery, which was really busy that afternoon with people traveling from all distances to take pictures in front the sign made famous by ‘Friday the 13th”.

The famous sign from the film “Friday the 13th”.

What I got a kick out of was that the man who ran the cemetery was outside making himself available for picture taking and was selling cemetery dirt for $10.00 a jar. The irony is that people were buying it and making donations to help renovate the church. I thought that was very clever.

Selling cemetery dirt on Friday the 13th was a brilliant idea.

Before I Ieft Hope for the afternoon, I stopped for some dessert at Humpty Juniors in Colombia, NJ right down the road from Hope and had a sundae. It was a nice way to end the day of touring. As I drove through Hope on my way back to Route 80 to go home, the town got a lot more crowded with people taking pictures and stopping to film the town. It really amazed me how serious some of these fans took these shots of the town.

Humpty Juniors at 72 Route 46 West in Colombia, NJ

https://humptyjuniors.com/

The Banana Cream Pie sundae at Humpty Juniors is outstanding.

The next weekend brought even more scares and delights when after finishing an extremely busy week of classes lead to me the Merchant’s House in New York City for a haunted house walking tour and back up to the Hudson River Valley to explore the Clermont Estate for their haunted house tour. Both were sold out and the crowds coming in and out at that time of the evening were pretty amazing.

The week before both of these tours was extremely stressful with three papers and two presentations at NYU and then at Bergen Community College I had to give three quizzes and two major projects. I was burnt out by the end of the week and needed to see a ghost or something that bumped in the night to distract me. I have never had so much coming at me at once.

On a rather gloomy Friday night, I headed into the City for a Candlelight (more of a flashlight) tour of the Merchant House at 29 East 4th Street for a tour of the house in the dark hoping to see a ghost. I had already toured the entire house on my own over the summer so I knew the house quite well and I had not seen or heard anything.

The Merchant House at 29 East 4th Street does look a little creepy at night.

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/11337

We met in the main parlor of the house at 8:00pm for our tour where they had an exhibition on spiritualism and death during the Victorian Age. That was very interesting the view that the Victorians had of handling death. It was very proper and ritualistic.

The exhibition on death and spiritualism

The darkened Parlor the night of the tour.

We walked through all the floors of the house and I did not see one ghost. There were actors dressed as various characters throughout the home (I did not know why they would want to be alone in the dark in a house that was known to be haunted but that was there deal) but with the exception with one woman coming to grab us, they kept still.

The Merchant House I have felt in the three times I have visited had a very welcoming feel to it. Like the family was happy so many people wanted to visit it. I never heard or saw anything and even at the end of the tour we were asked if we felt anything but no one answered. I guess we did not more than have a good time walking through the dark with a flash light and have a good time listening to the docent talk about the family history.

Trust me when I say that these tours sell out fast both last year and this year so book early. It is really worth the trip to walk through an old house on a gloomy night with safety in numbers. If we HAD seen something, we would have had each other to protect ourselves.

The Treadwell family supposedly haunts the floors of the Merchant House.

Later that weekend, I visited Downtown Boonton, NJ after a Bergen County Firemen’s Home Meeting and Entertainment Afternoon event and walked the downtown to see what was going on for Halloween.

The Bergen County Firemen’s Home Association October Event:

https://wordpress.com/post/tbcfha.wordpress.com/776

The downtown was decorated with all sorts of characters, ghosts, ghouls, monsters and things that went bump in the night. The Boonton Downtown Association always does a great job decorating for the Halloween holidays.

Downtown Boonton, NJ has a unique and funky vibe to it as it as the creative types are moving into town.

One of the creepy downtown figures.

This looked like a cross between Jason and the Phantom of the Opera.

This friendly welcomed me in Downtown Boonton, NJ.

This alien creature greeted me near the library.

Downtown Boonton, NJ is so beautiful during any season.

After a long week of classes and my online Hotel Sales & Marketing class on Friday morning by Zoom were finally over and papers done, up I went to the Hudson River Valley to visit my next ‘haunted house’ tour at the Clermont Estate in Germantown, NY, the home of the Livingston family.

I have visited the Clermont Estate many times before COVID but now that it has finally reopened they are having all the special events that were once extremely popular including the Halloween tour which they had not hosted since 2019. The house was amazing and decorated for a Victorian Halloween.

I was able to get up to Germantown while it was still light out after morning classes and was able to explore Downtown Germantown before the tour of Clermont. It is such a pretty little town but I can tell getting more expensive by the quality of shopping, restaurants and little inns that are in the downtown. I could tell that the sonic boom of COVID (people moving up from the city and changing all these little Hudson River towns), changed this town from a localized front to a quirky and expensive little community. Even the local grocery store was very nice in quality but very expensive.

The downtown Germantown shopping area.

The historical section of Germantown, NY.

The historic home just off Downtown Germantown.

After I toured Germantown, I had enough time once I got to the Clermont estate to tour the grounds and take pictures to update my blog. Things really did change from summer to fall. Most of the gardens were all dead now, the leaves were turning golden brown, yellow and red and it was a bit chiller outside. It was still fun to explore the grounds and watch the parks people lit the pumpkins. I had plenty of time to explore the estate before it got dark.

I walked along the river paths and passed groups of people taking pictures, past the ruins of the old Robert Livingston home that was destroyed by fire and then toured the gardens that were now in their fall transition. The estate was no less elegant and it looked beautiful in the autumn.

I made my way to the Visitors Center where the staff had fresh apple cider and cider doughnuts for all the people touring the estate that night and classic candies like tootsie rolls and Mary Janes for us to enjoy for early ‘trick or treating’. We all had a nice time watching the videos of the house and looking at the displays in what was once the old stables. Then our tour took place and we were led to the mansion.

The Ghost Tour took us on a tour through the house to meet the costumed characters throughout the mansion. The mansion was decorated for the Halloween and with the lights dimmed, it gave the house an eerie appearance to it.

When I arrived at the Clermont Estate, the house loomed in the distance in its it glories with the golden colors of autumn. It was so breathtaking along the Hudson River Valley with hues of gold, red and orange.

https://www.friendsofclermont.org/

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/3928

Jack-a Lanterns lined the pathways and lit the way to the house when it got dark. The tours started at dusk with pumpkins lit giving it a spooky start to the evening.

Before the tour started, we were greeted in the Visitors Center with fresh Apple Cider Doughnuts and Apple Cider from a local farm in Kingston, NY.

We were also treated to old fashioned Halloween candy with Mary Janes, Tootsie Rolls and other treats.

We started our tour at 7:00pm at twilight just as it was getting dark with the lanterns lit and the house waiting in the distance. It gave the start of the tour an eerie look to it and the affect brought out the best of Halloween.

The hallway was decorated for Halloween.

First we met an embittered Robert Livingston (who over acted) and acted like a jerk when I filmed him performing.

We stopped in the haunted Living Room to talk to the maid.

We met the ghost of Janet Livingston Montgomery in the Parlor. She talked about her time in the house and how life was back then.

Then it was off to the Dining Room to meet the last inhabitant of the house, Janet Livingston.

Margaret Beekman Livingston guarding the Dining Room.

On the way to the kitchen, we met Captain Kidd, the Livingston children and the last owners of the house on the way out the back door to end the tour. The whole tour took less than an hour.

We exited the house through the kitchen and out the door to a moon lit night with jack-a-lanterns taking us back to the Visitors Center. I loved this picture because it really did look like we were leaving a haunted house. We made it back up to the Visitors Center before the last group left on their tour. I got to go to the bathroom before they closed for the evening. The parking lot was pitch black and I had to use my cellphone to find my car. It was a two hour trip home that evening.

The week in between the Haunted House tours and pre-Halloween weekend was sheer insanity with papers due, midterms at both colleges, grading and a lot of running around. I swear for the entire month of October I never sat still. It was long nights where I was up until 2:00am every night barely getting five hours of sleep. I know that is the life of the graduation student but it got to be too much for me. Work and school were getting to me.

Halloween on West 10th Street.

That week I had to judge the Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association Halloween House Decorating Contest which is in its third successful year. I had to drive every street in Hasbrouck Heights trying to find the most perfectly decorated house. I did not want to see access more than I wanted to see creativity. Having inflatables to me is cheating. It does not take much to inflate something. It was the people with the decorations on the house, the lighting and the props that make up how a house stands out in the contest. People who have fun and show other residents the true spirit of the holidays.

In the Merchant category that created the previous year, I look to the whole package of the business. Is it decorated inside and out? Does it have a window that is more than just props but a theme to it? How creative is the approach to the windows? I have to say that there was not many choices this year as many merchants did not decorate their windows this year. Most wait until Christmas to show their creativity. I am hoping the more exposure of this contest gets the more people will be more competitive at Halloween as well.

While that was going on and I walked the Boulevard looking for the perfect windows, the elementary school kids were painting the downtown merchants windows for the Annual Halloween Window Painting Contest. Those kids were really creative and here are some of the artworks I saw that afternoon:

HH Annual Window Painting Contest

HH Annual Window Painting Contest

HH Annual Window Painting Contest

Some of them were just fun.

Ghosts and Ghouls scare and delight.

Many spooky returns

The one on the right was my personal favorite.

Spooky creatures.

Spooky trees.

Ghosts haunting the way to Hasbrouck Heights.

A Halloween surprise.

More Ghost and ghouls

Chucky returns.

The rains returned on Sunday and through most of the week until the weekend before Halloween where we had a eighty one degree day that Saturday. Talk about brilliant weather and everyone really freaked out and ran around in shorts. The Saturday morning before Halloween I presented the winners of the Third Annual Hasbrouck Heights. I have never seen people so excited to receive an award which was well deserved. Here is the press release that we sent to the papers:

My blog on the ‘Third Annual Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association Halloween House Decorating Contest’:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/39522

The Third Annual Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association Halloween House Decorating Contest 2023

By Justin Watrel

Halloween has come to Hasbrouck Heights and the Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association has picked the winners in the Third Annual Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association Halloween House Decorating Contest. We traveled every road in town both during the day and at night to find the best ghosts, ghouls and things that go bump in the night on people’s lawns and houses, showing off the creativity of the residents of Hasbrouck Heights on Halloween night. The contest was under the direction of Chairman and Executive Board member Justin Watrel.

Justin Watrel, Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association Executive Board Member and Chairman of the Halloween House Decorating Contest.

The winners of the House Decorating Contest were Frank and Mary Rose Blunda at 510 Henry Street.

Frank Blunda with Chairman Justin Watrel, Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association.

The Blunda’s have been runner-up for the last two years and had ‘upped their game’ with new decorations and designing their lawn to be more of an ‘open haunted house.’

This year’s winner was 510 Henry Street. The Blunda’s upped their game this year after being runners up for the last two years.

The Blunda’s do not just decorate, their decorations invite you into the the display to admire and enjoy it.

When told they had won, Mrs. Blunda said, “I thought you were going to tell us we were runners up again” but the committee informed her and her husband, Frank, the master mind behind each year’s creative show, that they had won. “I added some extra things this year,” Frank Blunda said. “You should see the way we have lit the house at night. We have a lot of fun with this.” The Blunda’s have done an excellent job with decorating each year and have made the town proud with their creativity. It is an award well earned.

510 Henry Street at night

510 Henry Street in Hasbrouck Heights at night.

The Blunda’s decorations at night.

The two runners up this year were 36 Hamilton Avenue and 42 Central Avenue. The boarded-up windows and Mad Scientist display of the lawn at 36 Hamilton Avenue is the creative genius of residents Alex and Laura Pena.

Alex Pena in front of 26 Hamilton Avenue

“I love decorating the house for Halloween,” Alex Pena said. “This year I added more things to give it the look it has. I try to find a creative way to display all the skeletons and pieces I have.”

36 Hamilton Avenue was runner up in 2023.

36 Hamilton Avenue was looked like a haunted house.

The house has the appearance of a home abandoned except for the ghoulish residents on the lawn getting their final goodbyes. The walkways, roof and door awning were covered with skeletons welcoming you to this haunted abode.

The Mad Scientist display at 36 Hamilton Avenue.

The Chief of the Hasbrouck Heights Police Department Chief Joseph Rinke and his wife Lisa at 42 Central Avenue were the other runners-up in the contest. The roof and sides of the house have skeletons climbing and crawling their way into the house.

42 Central Avenue was another Runner up for the House decorating contest.

Ghosts and ghouls greet you from the walkway to the entrance of the house. When you enter, the entire house is decorated to the hilt with decorations in every room and even a spider display in the bathtub.

“Our daughter was born on Halloween so we like to entertain and have the house decorated for Halloween,” Lisa Rinke said of all the wonderful decorations around the house. “My husband spent a lot of time clasping skeletons around the house.” It showed in the way the skeleton army wanted to enter the home.

Joe and Lisa Rinke’s house at 42 Central Avenue had a skeleton army all over the house.

Chairman Justin Watrel with Joe and Lisa Rinke the Runners Up at 42 Central Avenue.

The Rinke family with their award.

The Merchants did their share of decorating along the Boulevard. This year’s winner for the Merchant category is the winner for the second year, Heights Flower Shoppe owner Ray Vorisek. Heights Flower Shoppe always does an excellent job not just with their windows but inside and outside the store as well.

Heights Flower Shoppe at 209 Boulevard won for the Second year in row.

Shoppers are greeted at 209 Boulevard with Mr. Pumpkin Head and various ghosts welcoming you into the story which was decorated to the hilt with interesting Halloween decorations, candy, and beautiful flowers to welcome guests to a Halloween feast.

Two time Merchant Division winner Ray Vorisek with Chairman Justin Watrel at Heights Flower Shoppe at 209 Boulevard.

https://www.heightsflowershoppe.com/

“I love decorating the store for the holidays,” Ray Vorisek said. “The staff and I have a lot of fun during the holidays.” We are so proud of Mr. Vorisek and his staff for the excellent job they do each year with all the holidays especially between Halloween and Christmas.

Owner of Heights Flower Shoppe owner Ray Vorisek in front of his award winning windows.

The inside of Heights Flower Shop at Halloween

The Runner Up this year was Mimi and Jose Rodriguez at Mimi’s VIP Pet Salon & Boutique at 444 Boulevard. Their creative display of a skeleton girl walking her skeleton dog was pure genius and built on the logo of the store.

Mimi’s VIP Pet Salon & Boutique at 444 Boulevard was the Runner up for the Merchant Window Decorating Contest.

https://www.facebook.com/mimisvipsalon/

“The logo is my wife walking her dog,” Jose Rodriguez said. “My wife built on that.” Mimi Rodriguez was just as surprised by being runner up. “We thought this was a great way to decorate the store for Halloween and we had fun with it.” It was a clever way to incorporate the logo of the store with the design of the windows.

Owner Mimi Rodriguez with Chairman Justin Watrel in front of her windows.

There were many great houses with Halloween decorations to choose from but we awarded Honorary Mention to 115 Ottawa Avenue for their continued creative decorations including the madman being electrocuted in the front yard and lavish displays by 82 Woodside Avenue and 253 Henry Street, both previous winners of the contest in 2022 and 2021 respectively.

Chairman Justin Watrel with Mimi’s VIP Pet Salon & Boutique owners Jose and Mimi Rodriguez in front of the their award winning window.

Winners Jose and Mimi Rodriguez in front of their business.

Owner Scott Varicario decorates to the hilt every year with ghosts, ghouls and witches and things that go bump in the night all over the lawn at 253 Henry Street. Things crawl, reach and grab while they climb up trees and cover the yard.

253 Henry Street was the winner in 2021 and Runner up in 2022 and 2023.

Owner Scott Varicario always does an excellent job with decorating his house.

253 Henry Street is an excellent display that shows the spirit of Halloween.

“I love decorating for Halloween,” Scott Varicario said when we handed him the Honorary Mention to his creative efforts.

253 Henry Street

Last year’s winners, Matt and Lisa Fiduccia at 82 Woodside Avenue also showed off their creative efforts with a display on their front yard that always changes and has creatures popping out from here and there. There is always a rivalry between these two winners to show their love of the Halloween spirit.

82 Woodside Avenue was the winner in 2022 and the Runner up in 2023.

82 Woodside Avenue in all it gory!

A special Honorary Runner Up was given to 115 Ottawa Avenue owner Dennis Hall for his excellent displays over the last two years. Mr. Hall was very touched by the Honorary Award and said, “I didn’t even finish decorating this year. There is a lot more I will add in the future.”

115 Ottawa Avenue (Special Honorary award)

Honorary Runners-Up and Honorary Mention to Dennis and Aidan Hall of 115 Ottawa Avenue.

Everyone was so happy to win their awards and even to be mentioned that it made all the hard work worth. I never worked so hard on an event before but the people who won were really touched by the whole event and I could tell put a lot of hard work into creating the ‘works of art’ on their lawns and I was so proud of their work.

After I handed out all the awards and took pictures for the papers, I was off to Coney Island to go to Luna Park for a class project on experiencing the park as a tourist for my Customer Relationship Management class. No one could believe the weather that Saturday. It was clear and sunny and 81 degrees. It felt like a summer day on the Boardwalk.

Luna Park in Coney Island on a strange 80 degree day.

https://lunaparknyc.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60827-d1796964-Reviews-Luna_Park_in_Coney_Island-Brooklyn_New_York.html

Our Research Paper for our Customer Relationship Management class:

We rode the Cyclone roller coaster, road the historic Carousel and then had lunch in the park at Luna Park’s pizzeria. The pizza was good but not the best I had ever eaten. They did a nice job with it and the service was very friendly. We got to spend most of the afternoon touring the park and talking with the staff getting their take on the park.

The Harvest Festival at Luna Park

The Halloween Harvest Festival

Luna Park was packed on this sunny warm late October afternoon.

We enjoyed lunch at the pizzeria.

The Luna Park Midway.

Our first ride was the Cyclone which I had not been on in years.

Our next ride that we experienced was the historic carousel which went around four times.

After we rode the only real ‘adult’ rides, we talked with the staff about the upcoming “Frost Festival” for the holidays when the park would be open through Christmas. This was a first for the amusement park and would extend tourism through Coney Island into the holiday season. The park staff seemed to like the fact that they had employment through the holiday season.

The Luna Park Boardwalk entrance.

After our walk through both Luna Park and Geno’s Wonderwheel Park, we went off to explore the Boardwalk. The Boardwalk was packed with people riding bikes and scooters, dancing on the Boardwalk and people were sunbathing all over the beach. Some people were swimming which I thought was crazy. The water must have been too cold.

The Boardwalk in Coney Island on that late October day.

We walked from the amusement section of Coney Island down to Brighton and Manhattan Beaches where the demographics and mood of the Boardwalk change immediately once you pass the Aquarium. It is more families and locals sitting the on Boardwalk in their chairs socializing with one another.

The amazing sunset on the Boardwalk that everyone stopped for to watch.

Even though it was eighty degrees out and getting darker it never fell below seventy degrees while we were there exploring the island and I was perfectly comfortable walking around in shorts and a sweatshirt. I was even hot with this and had gotten a tan that afternoon. The sunset was amazing on the beach and people just stopped to look.

The Boardwalk at twilight

The full moon at the end of the Boardwalk.

The parks lit at night.

Luna Park at 7:00pm at night was like a fantasy land of lights.

The amusements were busy when we finally left the parks around 7:30pm and I said good bye to my classmate and headed into Chinatown in Manhattan for a snack. I was getting hungry after all that walking and even Chinatown was busy on this warm evening. I just think the weather had people grasping onto what was left of the summer and enjoying it while they could.

The new Wonton Noodle Garden at 23 Pell Street.

http://www.wontonnoodlegarden.com/

My review on LittleShoponMainStreet@Wordpress.com:

I headed to Wonton Noodle Garden again for dinner. As the evening cooled, there was nothing better than a Cantonese Wonton Soup with Barbecue Pork, Wontons and Egg Noodles with a side of Fried Wontons. That was the best dinner and a great way to end the evening and a wonderful day. This is what a research paper should be all about. Being in the trenches and exploring it as a group.

The delicious ‘cure all’ Cantonese Wonton Soup with Barbecue Pork, Wontons and Egg Noodles.

The Fried Wontons here are delicious.

I had taken my students the next day to the Glen Rock Historical & Preservation Society for a extra credit field trip for an afternoon of exploring the museum. Talk about a change in weather in one day. We went from sunny, clear and warm to gloomy, raining and a drop of about twenty degrees. It was still warm but seasonally warm at sixty degrees. I was not sure how the students would react to the museum but it seemed to be an eye opener to most of them. They had never been here before.

The Glen Rock Historical & Preservation Society “Museum at the Station” at 176 Rock Road during a nice day in Glen Rock, NJ.

https://www.glenrockhistory.org/

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

We spent about two hours at the museum on a very rainy afternoon. The historical society ladies explained the museum and its collection to the students and the Mayor of Glen Rock joined us after the town’s Trunk or Treat event was over. Mayor Kristine Morieko spent time with my students getting to know them and supporting a project I was doing to create a Marketing plan for tourism to the town. It was a great afternoon of networking for the students and getting to know the town of Glen Rock. I got to see the museum on one of the rare days it was open and got to see the George Wolfe exhibition of the local cartoonist’s work.

The “George Wolfe” exhibition at the Glen Rock Historical & Preservation Society Museum.

On the night before Halloween, I got to visit the Metropolitan Museum of Art for a Private Members Night. It was after a very long day of classes and running around over the weekend so it was a welcome distraction. I love these Private Members Nights. It is fun to wander around the galleries and just take my time with visiting.

The Met logo for the ‘Halloween at the Met-Private Members Night’

Here is a link to the full blog:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/39354

The Metropolitan Museum of Art Private Members Night was the night before Halloween, known as ‘Mischief Night’, where more tricks than treats are part of the fun. The museum has these private nights so that members can enjoy the museum on their without the huge crowds that come during the day. These events are so popular now and they have adjusted the hours to 7:00pm-10:00pm where working people can now enjoy the evening.

The Met lit at night for the Private Members Night did look a little spooky but a festive environment was inside waiting for us. A giant house of mystery awaiting us with treasures inside.

The lines started to fill as we entered the museum at 7:30pm. I got there after my Digital Marketing class at NYU was over. All the tricks and treats of the museum were open to members who entered the front door if they dared!

The very festive entrance of The Met at the information booth represented the coming of fall and the Halloween and Thanksgiving holidays.

The beautiful Fall arrangements in The Met’s nooks. It really made the night festive.

The first exhibition that I visited was “The Northern Renaissance European Sculpture and Decorative Arts 1520-1630” and the exhibition held some of the most exquisite art of the collection. Beautiful decorative objects with the detailed work in the permanent collection. These treasures were gathered in one spot to show their true beauty.

The sign for ‘The Northern Renaissance European Sculpture and Decorative Arts 1520-1630’ exhibition

The craftsmanship of these objects were some of the most sophisticated of the era and royals competed to have the most beautiful objects adorn their homes. Some of the objects were pulled from the permanent collection and are different parts of the museum but when housed together they really make a statement of the quality and precise workmanship. These objects made a statement of the owners and who they were in society.

Decorative cups and goblets

Description of the cups

Decorative clocks and watches

A jewel encrusted Chalise.

“Diana and the Stag” by artist Joachim Friess.

https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/193623

One of the most detailed pieces of the show was “Diana and the Stag”. The craftsmanship of the piece was amazing and it is such a beautiful piece.

The silver Diana and the Stag art object.

The next room I went to was the Wrightman Wing down the stairs to see Vertigo of Color” Matisse, Derain and the Origins of Fauvism. All these beautiful and bright colors in paintings from the French coastline.

The Vertigo of Color Exhibition in the Wrightman Wing of the Met.

My favorite piece and the painting that stood out the most was ‘Open Window Collioure’ by Henri Matisse. It was the most beautiful painting of the show.

“Open Window Collioure” is one of the most vibrant paintings in the show.

The other painting that really stood out in the exhibition was by artist Andre Derain.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andr%C3%A9_Derain

The Andre Derain Painting “The Faubourg of Collioure”

The sign for the painting.

My next stop was the “Tree and Serpent: Early Buddhist Art in India, 200-400 CE” exhibition on the second floor. The display of Indian art was from all over the world and displayed some of the most unusual icons. The exhibition the immense craftsmanship of these early artists.

The entrance to the “Tree & Serpent: Early Buddhist Art in India 200 BCE-400 CE” exhibition.

The Railroad Panels of the exhibition

The Railing pillars of the exhibition.

The Railing pillar sign.

Statuary from the exhibition.

The Pillar Abacus with elephants venerating the Ramagrama stupa.

The Elephant Pillar sign.

When we left the museum that night into the darkness that would become Halloween the next day, the museum employees wished us a good evening and gave us this sweet treat, a chocolate pumpkin that we were all munching on as we left the museum. It was the perfect way to end the evening. This is why I love the Met and have been coming here since 1973 and a member since 1993. It is a place of magic!

The delicious “Treat” we got when we left The Met that evening. The museum knows how to treat its members!

After the haunted night at the museum was over, I walked along the streets of the Upper East Side of Manhattan enjoying the decorations in preparation for Halloween the next day. Families really decorated their homes and the stores and brownstones were decked out for the Halloween holidays. This is becoming just as big as Christmas. Here are some of the great decorations that I saw that night.

Most of the these pictures were taken in the East 80’s and 70’s along the side streets between Madison Avenue and Third Avenue as I explored the neighborhood looking for the best haunts. People were really creative this Halloween.

Walking around the Upper East Side on Halloween week.

Halloween windows at a Park Avenue Florist during Halloween week.

Halloween decorations on the Upper East Side in the East 80’s.

Halloween on the Upper East Side in the East 80’s.

Halloween on the Upper East Side.

The haunting of the Upper East Side.

The haunting of the Upper East Side.

The next night was Halloween night and the Annual Halloween Parade that was celebrating its 50th Anniversary. My professor called class that night because she was sick and that meant getting to the parade route at 4:00pm. This meant meeting up with ‘cousin’ Mark Schuyler (our families married into one another 150 years ago so it makes us tenth cousins by marriage) and guarding the performers gate. I swear we hear every excuse from people trying to sneak in to watch the parade from they live here to they have reservations to a restaurant inside.

Guarding the gate: “Cousins” Mark Schuyler and Justin Watrel

The parade went by really well. The weather cooperated and it was in the high 50’s so it was a crisp but warm night at the parade. It was nice to see the crowds coming back to the parade again. COVID really effected the parade and in 2020 there was no parade. When it came back in 2021 (finally), it was nice to see people again.

Puppet rehearsal on Dominick Street and Sixth Avenue.

We stood at the gate, talked to tourists visiting the City for the parade and directing them to where they could march in it (it is at Canal Street where you will stand with hundreds of other costumed revelers ready to march up Sixth Avenue. People were having a ball. The parade is always exciting.

Excitement builds as the Ghostbusters enter the parade.

When we closed the gate at 8:00pm, I got to watch the parade from where it begins at Dominick Street and Sixth Avenue. This is where the magic is created and you see all the floats go uptown. I am not sure why people keep trying to sneak into the parade from here because it is not the greatest place to see the parade. You can see all the performers but it is better to go uptown on Sixth Avenue and enjoy it from there.

Patrons ready to enter the parade.

One of the best marshal costumes at the parade.

I watched the parade floats pass by me and now I could see why people fight to get onto the floats. Everyone on the floats looked like they were having a blast. People in costume were dancing and singing to mostly disco music on the floats as they passed by to head up Sixth Avenue. In between, hundreds of people marched in costume uptown. It made for an exciting parade.

The floats prepare to head up Sixth Avenue.

Floats heading uptown with everyone having a good time.

The bees entering the parade.

The floats entering the parade.

People getting ready to enter the parade to head uptown.

I left the parade around 9:30pm as it got cooler to head to dinner with other members of the parade staff. I could not believe how crazy busy the City was below 23rd Street. Every fast food, pizzeria and bar was packed with people. All the way to the restaurant, costumed people filled all the restaurants and bars much to the delight of every business owner around the parade route.

The irony of the whole evening was that when I left the restaurant that evening for home I passed a West Elm that was completely decorated for Christmas! As I looked at the Christmas trees, ghost, ghouls and things that bump in the night passed me drunk. God, these holidays are getting blurred. They are not even waiting until Thanksgiving to get the Christmas displays up. That was an interesting way to end Halloween night. That was until I got back to Hasbrouck Heights and the bus passed a house with a Christmas tree up.

Halloween would not be complete without a trip to the Pumpkin Blaze at Van Cortlandt Manor at Croton-on-the-Hudson. I lucked out and it was another mild night in the 50’s when I arrived at 7:00pm.

I stopped for dinner at Dong Happy Garden at 440 Riverside Avenue #440 for dinner like I usually do before I go to the Blaze. Their food is always delicious. I swear that I have never had a bad meal there. As it cooled, I was in the mood for some Wonton Soup. The chicken broth was rich in chicken and ginger flavor and the wontons were plentiful. It was the perfect start to dinner.

The Wonton Soup at Dong Happy Garden at 440 Riverside Avenue #440 is excellent.

https://www.menupix.com/westchester/restaurants/3212099/Dong-Happy-Garden-Menu-Croton-On-Hudson-NY

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g47560-d4616434-Reviews-Dong_Happy_Garden-Croton_on_Hudson_New_York.html?m=19905

For dinner I am trying to lay off the fried foods and had the Beef with Broccoli, which is excellent here. The beef is plentiful and very tender, marinading in Hunan and Soy sauce and loaded with fresh broccoli. They have a nice place to sit while you are eating here, better than most take out places I go to and I highly recommend it before heading in for the grand show of hundreds of pumpkins.

My dinner on a cool night, Beef and Broccoli with Pork Fried Rice and an egg roll and a Coke.

The Beef and Broccoli is so good here!

After a good dinner it was off to the Blaze. For some reason, I did not see as many pumpkins as I normally do. It might have been because it was the second to last weekend of the show and they have been gearing the show down for the end of the season.

The entrance to the Pumpkin Blaze at Van Cortlandt Manor.

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g47560-d116391-r925606933-Van_Cortlandt_Manor-Croton_on_Hudson_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/3677

The Van Cortland Manor at 500 South Riverside Avenue is always packed this time of the year. The night I went it was not different. I had never come to the show at 7:00pm and it was busier than usual. When you go to the 8:00pm, you have the estate to yourself.

The entrance to the Pumpkin Blaze in 2023.

There were a lot of the same displays in years past with pumpkin Ferris wheels, a pumpkin carousel, a pumpkin art gallery and city scenes. This year there were a series of pumpkin characters in a circus scene, flying through the air and acting silly. There were headless horseman displays and wondering through the maze. The illuminated Albany Post Road at night is really amazing at night.

You are greeted by Pumpkin Ghouls when you enter the Blaze.

Greeted by creatively carved pumpkins.

Some of the carvers did an amazing job with it.

My favorite group of pumpkins.

Passing the Pumpkin Church

Entering the Pumpkin Blaze that evening is like entering a surreal Halloweenland with lights and decorations all over the place. You really have to take your time to walk through the displays and see the details that are being shown.

Walking through the Pumpkin Art Museum.

Walking through the maze of the Blaze.

The decorated old Albany Post Road with pumpkins called the ‘Infinity Road”. The eerie road leads to no where but is actually the road that once led to Albany and where the Van Cortlandts had their pub and ferry building.

The Haunted Jellyfish as I entered the Tappan Boo Bridge

Walking through the lit tunnel with other patrons.

Crossing the bridge near the jellyfish.

The Van Cortlandt Manor lightshow. The manor will be closed for another year for renovations but still the light show is amazing.

Walking through the pumpkin cemetery across from the mansion.

Exiting the Blaze for the evening.

The spider web towards the entrance.

The Pumpkin figure as I left the Blaze that evening.

I was at the Blaze that evening for about an hour. It really was a nice walk. The crowds were not as heavy as they normally are but once Halloween is over, the place is busy but not as busy are before. Still it was another enjoyable way to end the Halloween season.

Again the irony was as I was driving home that night as I passed through Tarrytown and Sleepy Hallow, I saw the Christmas lights and decorations up. Goodbye Halloween and Hello Christmas!

Happy Halloween!

Places to Visit:

Hope Historical Society

323 High Street

Hope, NJ 07844

No Phone Number-Please email via their website.

https://www.hopenjhistory.com/

Open: Sundays 1:00pm-3:00pm from June to October: Please check website for times

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g46518-d23805634-r822429868-Hope_Historical_Society-Hope_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com :

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/6341

Merchant’s House Museum

29 East 4th Street

New York, NY 10003

(212) 777-1089

Open: Sunday 12:00pm-5:00pm/Monday-Wednesday Closed/Thursday-Saturday 12:00pm-5:00pm

Admission: Adults $15.00/Seniors (over 65) and Students $10.00/Members are free/ Special Guided tours are $20.00

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d285699-Reviews-Merchant_s_House_Museum-New_York_City_New_York.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/11337

Clermont State Historic Site-New York Parks & Recreation

Route 6 (Off Route 9G)

Germantown, NY  12526

(518) 537-6622

https://parks.ny.gov/historic-sites/16/details.aspxhttp:/clermontstatehistoricsite.blogspot.comwww.friendsofclermont.org

https://www.friendsofclermont.org/

Open: April 11-October 31 Wednesday-Sunday 10:30am-4:00pm/November 1-

December 22/Saturday & Sunday 10:30am-3:00pm

Please call in advance due to seasons and weather conditions

Fee: Adults $7.00/Seniors and Adults $6.00/Children Under 12 and Members Free

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g47780-d263704-Reviews-The_Clermont_Mansion-Germantown_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/3928

Van Cortlandt Manor

5 Riverside Avenue

Croton-on-the-Hudson, NY  10502

(914) 366-6900

Open: See website for seasonal hours

My review on TripAdvisor (Manor and Pumpkin Blaze):

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g47560-d116391-Reviews-Van_Cortlandt_Manor-Croton_on_Hudson_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/3677

The Museum at the Station

The Glen Rock Main Line Station

178 Rock Road

Glen Rock, NJ  07452

(201) 342-3268

http://www.glenrockhistory.org

http://glenrockhistory.wix.com/grhs

email: GRHistoricalsociety@gmail.com

Open: The last Sunday of each month from 1:00pm-3:00pm

There is no admission fee although donations are gratefully accepted.

TripAdvisor Review:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46608-d2661796-Reviews-Maywood_Station_Museum-Maywood_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/2022

Luna Park

1000 Surf Avenue

Brooklyn, NY 11224

(718) 373-5862

https://lunaparknyc.com/

Open: Sunday 11:00am-8:00pm/Monday-Friday Closed/Saturday 11:00am-8:00pm (Winter Season)

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60827-d1796964-Reviews-Luna_Park_in_Coney_Island-Brooklyn_New_York.html

Places to Eat:

Dale’s Market

66 Route 94

Blairstown, NJ 07825

(908) 362-7395

https://dalesmarket.com/

Open: Sunday-Saturday 5:30am-8:00pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Profile/R4960NKjustinw/mediabatch/12274169?m=19905

Humpty Juniors

72 Route 46 West

Columbia, NJ 07832

(908)475-4376

https://humptyjuniors.com/

Open: Sunday-Thursday 11:00am-8:00pm/Friday and Saturday 11:00am-9:00pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g46372-d7046832-r921168660-Humpty_Junior_s-Columbia_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

My review on LittleShoponMainStreet@Wordpress.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/littleshoponmainstreet.wordpress.com/3023

Wonton Noodle Garden (moved in June 2023 to this new location)

23 Pell Street

New York, NY 10013

(212) 966-4033

http://www.wontonnoodlegarden.com/

Open: Sunday-Saturday 11:00am-9:00pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d2370537-Reviews-Wonton_Noodle_Garden-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on LittleShoponMainStreet@Wordpress.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/littleshoponmainstreet.wordpress.com/1355

Dong Happy Garden

440 South Riverside Avenue #440

Croton on the Hudson, NY 10520

(914) 271-7888

https://www.menupix.com/westchester/restaurants/3212099/Dong-Happy-Garden-Menu-Croton-On-Hudson-NY

Open: Sunday 12:00pm-10:00pm/Monday-Thursday 11:00am-10:30pm/Friday-Saturday 11:00am-11:00pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g47560-d4616434-Reviews-Dong_Happy_Garden-Croton_on_Hudson_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/diningonashoestringinnyc.wordpress.com/6233

Day Two Hundred and Fifty-The Second Annual Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association Halloween House Decorating Contest October 30th, 2022

Haunted Hasbrouck Heights returns with the Second Annual Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association Halloween Decorated House Contest 2022

It was a series of long drives around town, late nights looking at spooky lights, figures of fright and things that go bump in the night but the members of the Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association Halloween Decorating Contest made a decision who had the best decorated house and downtown business in Hasbrouck Heights.

Decorations at 85 Woodside Avenue

Like last year the decision was tough but we chose 85 Woodside Avenue, the home of Matt and Lisa Fiduccia, last year’s runners up. The house was decorated to the hilt with ghosts, ghouls and figures that frightened the passersby. “We learned more from last year,” Matt Fiduccia said when they found out they won this year’s contest. “We added more to it.”

85 Woodside Avenue in Hasbrouck Heights Halloween 2022-Winner

The zombies and ghouls of 85 Woodside Avenue

The committee liked the theme of the property, the organization of the props and decorations of the doorway and the lighting of the house the night before Halloween which really showcased their creativity. The family was really excited about winning this year and the whole Fiduccia family joined Chairman Justin Watrel and Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association President Steve Palladino for the presentation of the plaque and official sign from the organization declaring them winner. It was an award well deserved.

Chairman Justin Watrel with the Fiduccia family at 85 Woodside Avenue

Winners Matt and Lisa Fiduccia with their children and the official sign from the Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association

It was a tough decision to make this year as last year’s winner, Scott Vicario and runners up last year Frank and Mary Rose Blunda also created wonderful displays that would dazzle and delight trick or treaters the next night for Halloween.

253 Henry Street-The Runner-up this year

This is the second year Scott Vicario created a moving cemetery and ghoul fest all over his front lawn starting with a possessed woman climbing a tree outside the property and a variety of ghouls and zombies climbing popping and walking around the yard. “I keep finding new things to add to the display,” Scott told the committee when he was presented his award. “I look for professionally made displays.” Mr. Vicario who lives at 253 Henry Street said he “has more planned for next year” to win the award back.

Last year’s winner, Scott Vicario, was runner up this year

Some of the decorations were truly frightening

Ghosts and ghouls at 253 Henry Street

Scott Varicario in front of 253 Henry Street

253 Henry Street was full of zombies and ghosts

The other runners up last year, Frank and Mary Rose Blunda, keep creating frightening but friendly displays that dazzle their Halloween visitors. Trick or Treaters keep coming back for the displays of vampires and pumpkin headed beasts.

510 Henry Street

“We really love Halloween and we do this for the kids,” Frank Blunda said. “The families get such a kick out of visiting our house every year.” The Blunda’s love that families take a special trip to see their home.

The Ghosts, Ghouls and Pumpkin Heads of 510 Henry Street

Mary Rose and Frank Blunda of 510 Henry Street were runners-up again this year

Chairman Justin Watrel with Mary Rose and Frank Blunda at 510 Henry Street

The House Decorating Committee added a Merchant Division this year and we were dazzled by Heights Flower Shoppe, who always displays their holiday merchandise so nicely. Ray Vorisek, the owner of Heights Flower Shoppe was very thankful to the committee for the award. “We always like decorating the store to the hilt for the holidays.

Heights Flower Shoppe at 209 Boulevard in Hasbrouck Heights, NJ

People come from all over to visit us.” Both inside and outside, the store was full of all sorts of merchandise to decorate the house and for creative Halloween parties. Ghosts and witches flowed all over the store.

The decorations of the windows at Heights Flower Shoppe

With winner and owner, Ray Vorisek

Chairman Justin Watrel with owner Ray Vorisek outside the store with the official Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association sign

The Runner-up was Spindler’s Bakery, owned by Bob and Ginny Spindler, whose family business has been in Hasbrouck Heights for over fifty years.

Spindler’s Bake Shop at 247 Boulevard was this year’s runner up

“We have a creative team that works together here,” Mrs. Spindler said as she accepted her framed award. “It is a team effort that got the store ready for the holiday.” Spindler’s Bakery not only decorated the windows with pumpkins and bears ready for Trick or Treating but the store had all sorts of delicious looking decorated pastries and cookies, perfect for any Halloween Party.

The inside of Spindler’s Bake Shop with decorations and Halloween treats

Chairman Justin Watrel with runner-up winner, Ginny Spindler and her co-worker

We also wanted to mention the Honorary mentions, whose decorated home made the first and second round cut of the contest and we wish you luck next year. These are 110 Central Avenue, 458 Jefferson Avenue, 415 Madison Avenue, 115 Ottawa Avenue and 310 Bell Avenue. Good luck and have a wonderful and safe holiday season from the Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association.

Honorary Mentions:

110 Central Avenue

110 Central Avenue

458 Jefferson Avenue

458 Jefferson Avenue

115 Ottawa Avenue

115 Ottawa Avenue

310 Bell Avenue

310 Bell Avenue

415 Madison Avenue

415 Madison Avenue

Bell Avenue

Bell Avenue

Central Avenue

Central Avenue

Ottawa Avenue

Ottawa Avenue

We will see everyone when Santa arrives when we start Christmas Tree sales the day after Thanksgiving. We sell out fast!

The link to the article on Tapinto:

https://www.tapinto.net/towns/hasbrouck-heights-slash-wood-ridge-slash-teterboro/sections/in-the-community/articles/the-hasbrouck-heights-men-s-association-s-halloween-decorating-contest-returns-for-2022

Giggles the Scarecrow

Day One Hundred and Eighty-One: The Legend of “Giggles the Scarecrow”-Halloween continued October 31st, 2020

Every October my neighbors decorate their home to the hilt on Halloween and every year they drag out this strange scarecrow out among their other decorations. I tease my neighbor that it looks like it wants to “rape and pillage the neighborhood”. I just think the thing looks mischiefness. She just laughs at me.

So over the years I have named this decoration “Giggles the Scarecrow” and created a story line for him:

“The Legend of Giggles the Scarecrow”:

“When bad boys and girls come to our neighborhood on Halloween Night ready to perform more tricks then treats, Giggles will come to life and grab’em. He will then take’em away to his haunted home in the woods. Hee, Hee, Hee.”

Okay, I had a lot of time on my hands to think on Halloween Night. It is the era of COVID.

What do you think? Do you want to test the “Legend of Giggles the Scarecrow”?

Giggles the Scarecrow

“Giggles the Scarecrow” on Halloween day in Hasbrouck Heights, NJ.