Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Tips To Reduce, Reuse And Recycle Halloween Costumes, Decorations And Treats

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Oct, 2016 12:47 PM
    TORONTO — With ghosts and goblins preparing to haunt the streets of Canada's cities this Halloween, the good news is it's possible to have a ghoulishly good time without generating a lot of waste.
     
    By observing the three Rs — reduce, reuse and recycle — when it comes to costumes, decorations and treats, enjoyment of the holiday needn't be sacrificed.
     
    "There could be some arguments that you don't celebrate it at all and you shut your light off and don't do anything — that's the least wasteful you can possibly be," says Emma Rohmann, an environmental engineer and green building consultant who runs the company Green at Home in Toronto.
     
    "But I think part of green living is getting into some of the cultural activities that you enjoy and I happen to like Halloween so we do get into it" in a low-key way.
     
    Katelin Leblond, co-founder of PAREdown, a website that documents going back to basics with zero-waste living, tries not to make trick-or-treating the focus of Halloween for her five-year-old son and three-year-old daughter.
     
    "We'll carve pumpkins and will see if they can find a local activity like a corn maze that doesn't require waste generation," she says.
     
     
     
    Last year, when the Leblond family lived in Victoria, they went to a bonfire put on by the fire department. This year, Leblond's children will don a mermaid costume and a biker costume found at a secondhand store for a total of about $18. No face paint will be used and the costumes will be donated afterward.
     
    Rohmann makes costumes for her five-year-old daughter and two-year-old son or shops at nearby consignment stores.
     
    "Luckily my daughter was a ghost last year so that was manageable. We do hand-me-down costumes....  I've got two kids now so my son is reusing my daughter's costumes for the most part."
     
    Rohmann also reuses simple Halloween decorations each year.
     
    "I try not to get stuff like crepe paper or the cobwebs or things that aren't going to last as long," says Rohmann, who has also volunteered with the Queen of Green coaching program with the David Suzuki Foundation. Though lawn tombstones and outdoor skeletons are plastic, their life cycle is longer.
     
    "You're not using energy to keep them inflated or the lights to keep them lit up, so I think it's a lower-footprint way of doing it."
     
    They both advocate taking the non-food route when it comes to handing out treats at the door.
     
    Rohmann is giving out Halloween-themed pencils, though she plans to buy some candy to have on hand for older kids.
     
     
    "I know we can never have enough art supplies in the house — pencils, crayons, notebooks, that sort of thing. I'm going for practical," she says.
     
    Both women suggest avoiding impractical dollar-store trinkets, which can become clutter and end up in landfill.
     
    For candy, look for a type packaged in a recyclable cardboard box such as Smarties, which are also peanut free.
     
    The wrappers on individually wrapped chocolate bars can't be recycled, but some communities can accommodate the cellophane from candy like lollipops in their soft plastic recycling program.
     
    If the opportunity arises, Leblond's son will choose plastic-free packaged treats when trick-or-treating.
     
    "Even if the homeowner doesn't have any plastic-free treats to provide this year it may provide food for thought for coming years," she says.
     
    To collect their loot, children can use a pillowcase or reusable cloth shopping bag. Leblond's son uses a Halloween pail they had before they started their zero-waste lifestyle and her daughter uses an Easter basket.
     
    An alternative to handing out candy is to donate to the Trick or Eat program, an initiative aimed at fighting hunger.
     
    "Volunteers collect food and other goods such as diapers and feminine hygiene products and raise awareness about hunger issues on people's doorsteps, then deliver goods to a local aid agency," says Sarah Archibald, program manager of the non-profit, youth-driven charity Meal Exchange, which runs Trick or Eat.
     
     
    There are at least 85 campaigns running across the country. Last year, about 3,800 participants raised $380,000 worth of food, says Archibald. In total, $5 million worth of food has been raised over the 15 years the program has been running.
     
    A Calgary dental office is also trying to reduce Halloween waste by asking kids to trade in their candy. Children can bring in their booty to Evans Dental Health & Wellness on Nov. 1 for the Halloween Candy Buy Back program. 
     
    The child gets $1 for every pound of candy and the dental service donates a pound of apples to the local food bank. This year, they are shipping the candy to the California company Blume Distillation to be converted to biofuel.
     
    The program has been running for nine years. Last year, 2,500 pounds of apples were donated.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Mark Zuckerberg Philanthropic Arm Leads $50 Million Investment Into BYJU

    Mark Zuckerberg Philanthropic Arm Leads $50 Million Investment Into BYJU
    Online education start-up BYJU's has raised $50 million (about $332.3 crore) from a clutch of investors, led by Chan Zuckerberg Initiative (CZI) and Sequoia Capital.

    Mark Zuckerberg Philanthropic Arm Leads $50 Million Investment Into BYJU

    100 Years, 3,300 Miles: Vintage Motorcycles Hitting The Road

    100 Years, 3,300 Miles: Vintage Motorcycles Hitting The Road
    ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Thomas Trapp sells new Harley-Davidson motorcycles in Germany, but for the next two weeks he'll be riding 3,300 miles coast to coast in the United States, aboard one made 102 years ago.

    100 Years, 3,300 Miles: Vintage Motorcycles Hitting The Road

    He Sexually Abused Her As A Child. She Became A Police Officer And Hunted Him Down

    He Sexually Abused Her As A Child. She Became A Police Officer And Hunted Him Down
    When Erlis Chaisson met with the now grown woman he abused as a child, he had no idea she was recording his confessionA woman who was sexually abused from the age of eight has seen her attacker put behind bars 15 years later, after she became a police officer and secretly taped his confession.

    He Sexually Abused Her As A Child. She Became A Police Officer And Hunted Him Down

    Kansas Man Chooses Jail Over Wife - Robs Bank, Sits In Lobby Until Arrested

    Kansas Man Chooses Jail Over Wife - Robs Bank, Sits In Lobby Until Arrested
    Lawrence John Ripple gave a note to a Bank of Labor teller on Friday in Kansas City, Kansas, demanding cash and warning he had a gun, court documents say. 

    Kansas Man Chooses Jail Over Wife - Robs Bank, Sits In Lobby Until Arrested

    Indian Billionaire's Australia Mansion 'Taj Mahal On-The-Swan' To Be Demolished

    Indian Billionaire's Australia Mansion 'Taj Mahal On-The-Swan' To Be Demolished
    The residence was said to emerge as Perth's most expensive home on the 6,600 square metre block of land in luxurious riverside suburb of Peppermint Grove for which the couple had already paid more than 22 million dollars.

    Indian Billionaire's Australia Mansion 'Taj Mahal On-The-Swan' To Be Demolished

    Haven't Been To Taj With Michelle Yet, Obama Tells PM Modi

    Haven't Been To Taj With Michelle Yet, Obama Tells PM Modi
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi met US President Barack Obama this afternoon in their eighth one-on-one interaction in the last two years.

    Haven't Been To Taj With Michelle Yet, Obama Tells PM Modi