One-Tank Trip for
Oct. 10/15
(c) By Jim Fox
If the spirits move
you, head out to an Ontario provincial park for a howling good Halloween.
Numerous Ontario
Parks plan spooky Halloween events throughout the month.
Kids even go trick
or treating in the parks as campers decorate their sites.
A Halloween-inspired camping site at Algonquin Provincial Park. (Ontario Parks photo) |
There are
pumpkin-carving events, costume contests and scavenger hunts but the parks’
Andrew Chambers says the coolest Halloween events are the naturalist-led
evening activities.
These focus
on creatures with scary reputations such as spiders, bats and owls.
Park
naturalists dig up “weird and wonderful facts” about these creatures and
share them during spooky night hikes, owl prowls and coyote and wolf howls.
Special haunted
events are on from this weekend at Wheatley, Emily, Grundy Lake, Six Mile Lake,
Point Farms, Rock Point and Rondeau provincial parks.
Camper Halloween happens
Oct. 16 to 18 and Oct. 23 to 25 at Bronte Creek Provincial Park in Oakville.
It starts Friday
nights with a campfire open to campers and day visitors.
An elaborately decorated campsite ready for Halloween at Point Farms Provincial Park. (Ontario Parks photo) |
For registered
campers on Saturdays, there are prizes for best decorated campsite, trick or treating
and a spooky guided evening hike.
Witches in the
woods are at MacGregor Point Provincial Park on Lake Huron near Port Elgin on
Oct. 17 and 18.
There is trick or treating,
campsite decorating and pumpkin-carving contests, scavenger hunts and walks
along the haunted trail.
Craigleith
Provincial Park in the Blue Mountains presents Shivers on the Shale to “get
your scare on” Oct. 17 and 18.
There will
be trick or treating, costume and campsite decorating contests, terrifying
ghost stories, pumpkin carving, spooky scavenger hunts and a haunted picnic
shelter.
Join park
naturalists for special Halloween-themed interpretive programs at the Pinery
Provincial Park on Lake Huron near Grand Bend on Oct. 23 to 25.
Fall campers take part in pumpkin carving at Emily Provincial Park. (Ontario Parks photo) |
Experience
autumn camping and learn to differentiate between spooky myths and facts, decorate
your campsite, go trick or treating and create a scarecrow using natural
objects nearby.
The
fun begins on Oct. 23 and continues until Oct. 25 at Algonquin Provincial
Park’s Mew Lake with an owl prowl.
There are events
with the park naturalists, “pick of the patch” pumpkin carving, spookiest
campsite and best costume contests.
Go trick or treating
among the campsites, join a wolf howl at the old airfield and roast
creepy-crawly spider wieners and ghostly marshmallows.
For the list of
Halloween events: ontarioparks.com/parksblog/have-a-howling-good-halloween
Experience true horror
They’re turning up
the terror a notch this year at Bingemans’ Screampark in Kitchener.
“Throughout the
month, visitors to Bingemans will be exposed to things straight out of
nightmares,” said publicist Stephen Murdoch.
Now in its 10th
year, Screampark is bringing terror to the next level with the haunted houses –
Freakshow, Cabin in the Woods and the Dormitory, he said.
Experience terror at Bingemans Screampark in Kitchener. |
This “interactive
horror experience” continues until Halloween and new is the Red Room.
“There are two
rooms, 6,000 seconds, numerous clues and one very disturbed creature making this
the ultimate escape room that will test teamwork, quick thinking and the
ability to keep your heart rate down.”
The brave can join
the fight against zombies in the Zombie Outbreak Zone where they will embark on
a kilometre-long journey in a genuine M35A2 military cargo truck equipped with
paintball shooters and lots of real zombie targets.
The Bingemans’
camping package includes an overnight and two triple house passes from
$79.95, based on double occupancy. Dates, prices and details: bingemans.com; screampark.ca
Beware of the lurking ghouls
Pumpkinferno at
Haunted Harbour takes place Thursday to Saturday from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. through
Oct. 31.
It happens at
historic Discovery Harbour in Penetanguishene where there are “amazing” carved
pumpkin displays set against the night-time backdrop of the port.
Carved artificial pumpkin displays are at Discovery Harbour in Penetanguishene. |
The realistic,
artificial pumpkins have been shaped from molds of real pumpkins by a group of
young artists.
Mazes and crafts
provide fun, but beware as zombies and ghouls lurk in the all new “Terror Zone
(not suitable for young children).”
Admission is $8 a
person (no charge for children five and younger) with a non-perishable item for
the local food bank. discoveryharbour.on.ca
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Jim Fox can be reached at onetanktrips@hotmail.com
For more One-Tank Trips: http://1tanktrips.blogspot.ca
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