With warm, mellow weather, and a day spent roaming the cemetery at Sleepy Hollow beforehand, I was definitely in the mood to celebrate Halloween by nightfall. So I finally committed to getting tickets well ahead and the experience was overwhelmingly worth the ticket price and travel. Not far from New York City, and even closer to the famously haunted town of Sleepy Hollow, the Blaze, as it’s commonly known, attracts over 100,000 visitors every year and is, judging by word of mouth and ticket sales, all the rage. This right here is my honest and candid take on the experience, as per usual.Last October 22nd, the only date available for tickets when I checked a couple of months ago, I took a tour of the now famous Great Jack-o-Lantern Blaze at Croton-on-Hudson in New York State. Note: I was not in any way compensated or requested to give The Blaze a favorable review. There was even an aquarium filled with seaweed, fish, an octopus (whose creator we randomly met in the tent afterwards!), and other sea creatures.īe sure to check out The Great Jack-o-Lantern Blaze next year! It’s well worth a day (er, evening) trip from NYC. Elephants, giraffes, and dragons, to name a few. Some of my favorite pumpkin creations were the massive animals built from several jack-o-lanterns. They are so intricately carved that it’s understandable that only 1/5 of the pumpkins are real and replaced weekly. The details on some of these pumpkins are just RIDICULOUS. Carving 5000 pumpkins per week for 6 weeks would be absurd (and costly!). While we were somewhat bummed to hear that most of the impressive jack-o-lanterns before us were fake, it makes complete sense. Through them, we learned that of the 5000(!) pumpkins, only 1000 are real – they are replaced each week and carved by a collection of volunteers. One thing I really appreciated was that all of the staff at The Blaze were super friendly and knowledgeable. Our immediate thought upon entering this attraction: HOW? How is this even possible?! And as a follow-up question: How many pumpkins are there here? Take a left if you’re in need of some food, otherwise turn right past a small shopping plaza that will lead you straight to the venue. To walk from the Croton-on-Hudson train station to The Blaze, walk north through the parking lot and onto the main road, take a right and walk to the end. The road seemed friendly enough to us pedestrians – there was even a sidewalk for part of the way. We knew that the walk from the train would take about 10 minutes on a “non pedestrian-friendly road” (whatever that meant). You can walk from the train station to The Blaze There was rum, there was bourbon, there was spice.
We came armed with a thermos and bottles of festive fall beverages to crack open on the train ride up. We weren’t 100% clear on the rules here: did we have to purchase alcohol on board, or sneak sips through a brown bag? Turns out, no one batted an eye as we poured drinks into plastic cups from an old water bottle. You’re allowed to drink alcohol on Metro-North trains
6 weeks in advance, to be exact.Īnd so on the first Saturday in November, I found myself on a train with 2 of my favorites, heading upstate for some fall fun! Tickets had sold out weeks in advance, so I made a mental note to buy tickets earlier this year. In my quest to try out new fall activities last year, I came upon The Great Jack-o-Lantern Blaze – an elaborate display of jack-o-lanterns at the Van Cortlandt Manor in Croton-on-Hudson.
In fact, I’ve done most of these things multiple times and they’re still fun – but what’s a semi-jaded New York City dweller to do to jazz up her fall and pretend like the inevitable god-awful winter is not upon us? I’ve done the halloween parade, gone apple picking, visited the county farm, done a corn maze, gone wine tasting, carved pumpkins, and leaf peeped.