Description
Witches’ Cauldron Gift basket
It’s fun to be a little witchy today and send all the little goblins a perfect selection of Halloween fun packages.
Great gift for the family and you can make it more personalized with the add-on options.
Nothing is more fun than to go down on memory lane and talk about all the past Halloween stories.
Add a special gift to your Witches’ Cauldron Treat Basket:
Halloween Story Package
This “sparkly” Halloween Story comes with a large Halloween window decal, and Halloween chocolates and candies in a shiny red tube. A really fun and spooky addition to your gift.
To set the scene properly for Halloween, Witches’ cauldron Halloween Gift includes:
- A large witches brew window decor
- Megaphone, makes 3 kinds of sounds
- Large spider
- Halloween kaleidoscope with stamp
- Halloween balloon
- Apple pie crumble dessert mix
- Old-fashioned Chicago caramel popcorn
- Pirouline wafer rolls filled with hazelnut cream
- Gingerbread cookies
- Chocolate-covered graham cookies
- Caramel candy
- Assorted Halloween chocolate bars
See more Halloween gift Baskets here
Gift Dimensions of Witches’ Cauldron Gift basket
Measures: 12″ x 12″ x 14″.
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Take Scare Of Yourself
Kids Halloween Jokes
What fruit do scarecrows love the most?
Straw-berries.
What does a witch use to do her hair?
Scarespray!
What happens when a ghost gets lost in the fog?
He is mist.
What room does a ghost not need?
A living room.
The Origin of Halloween
We can trace Halloween back to Celtic festivals which celebrated the new year on the 1st of November (not 1st of January). One thread that runs through all Halloween legends is the belief that the night of October 31st was the time when ghosts of the dead returned to earth. The ancients name for this festival Samhain** and its role was to mark the boundary between the old year and new.
With the spread of Christianity, the Church emphasized All Saints day on the 1st of November. This date was also known as All Hallows and gradually, the name for the night before All Hallows changed to hallow’s eve, then hallowe’en and finally Halloween.
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