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or families participating in the St. Charles Park District’s Gallery of Ghoulish Homes Tour, Halloween is not just a day to go trick-or-treating. It’s a serious passion.
Participants begin planning for the Ghoulish Homes Tour months in advance to create, build and decorate haunted scenes throughout their properties, complete with animatronics, lighting effects, music, fog machines and interactive displays. Some even include haunted trails and tents to tour — if you dare. The Park District even has a Facebook page
dedicated to the event — and a few families have created Facebook pages dedicated to their own houses, with all their haunting and spooktacular fun. Back this year will be live actors to roam throughout the yards as zombies, ghouls and ghosts, adding a touch of drama to the creepy scenes. In its 21st year, the Gallery of Ghoulish Homes Tour lures hundreds of families out nightly to visit about 25 homes from dusk to 10 p.m. Opening night is Oct. 15, and the tour runs through Halloween, Oct. 31. Judge’s night is Oct. 16. It’s not too late to sign up. Registration is open until Oct. 13, and participants can choose to compete in one of the following award categories: Best Actors (1-6 ghouls); Best Actors (7 or more ghouls); Best Rookie; Craftiest Creeper; Best Use of Technology; Eeriest Haunt (without actors); and Family Fun. Awards also will be given for Judge’s Favorite and People’s Choice.
A SCARY TRADITION
While the recognition is nice, families agree the
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reason they participate goes beyond the awards. “We love the holiday and have so much fun doing it as a family,” says Danielle Sumoski, whose family of four has transformed their property on Hemlock Drive into the “Sumoski Erie Acre” for 11 years now. “We love to win, but we love making fun memories and sharing our passion for Halloween with the next generation,” Sumoski says. Susanna and Joseph Vitale couldn’t agree more. For 15 years they have created spooky displays at their house in the Harvest Hills subdivision. “To us, it’s like celebrating a major holiday,” says Susanna Vitale. “We’ve been doing this for so long, there are adults who visited as kids who are now bringing their children to see our haunt. Creating a family tradition like that makes it all worth it.” The Sumoskis and Vitales are not alone in their Ghoulish Homes Tour addiction. Many returning participants were hooked from the first year. Mandy and Bill Isaacson first entered in 2016. “To hear all the laughing and screaming from visitors
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