Here are the best tips for keeping your kids safe during Halloween trick-or-treating
It’s Halloween, the scariest day of the year - but for many parents, it’s not because of the costumes or the scary movies.
It’s because, for many of our kids, they’re heading out trick-or-treating for the first time. And for those of us who watch too much Criminal Minds, it can be nerve-racking for parents to navigate.
Constable Brian Ward, who started the initiative Brian & Bobby to teach Kiwi kids about safety, has some practical tips for keeping kids safe this Halloween.
Make sure kids’ costumes are practical
“We all want to go as Olaf the snowman ‘cause he’s funny. But in reality if you put an Olaf the snowman’s head on, you’ve got two sticks and you can’t very well move,” Ward explains.
“So avoid things that have got full mass and helmets and everything else, because that’s going to cut down on your vision and everything else.”
The right supervision
“Take some supervision, and think age-appropriate supervision,” Ward advises.
“A 6-year-old going out with an 11-year-old is not age-appropriate unless you are standing at your house and you can see them going around the neighbourhood, in which case it’s all good.
“Stay on one side of the footpath and get the kids to go up one side and then you cross them over, and then go to the next. You don’t need to accompany them to every door.”
Prepare them for what’s in store
It’s important to explain what trick-or-treating means so your kids don’t come home disappointed or upset if they don’t get what they want.
“Trick or treat, not just treat, treat, treat ... give them some idea,” Ward says.
Respect others’ beliefs
Ward notes your child may come across a home that doesn’t celebrate Halloween for religious or cultural reasons.
In that situation, make sure they know how to respond respectfully and move on to the next house.
Put the devices away
“If you are the supervising parent, take the photo, take a couple of other photos, and then put the devices away so that your concentration is on your kids and what they’re doing.”
Take a torch
“You never know what’s going to happen,” Ward warns.
“You might turn around and all of a sudden it’s 8.30 and we were only meant to be out here until seven.
“So take a torch, and let your kids know that if they do get lost, we’re all going to meet by the Subway or we’re all going to meet by the school.”
This article was first published by the NZ Herald and is republished here with permission.