![]() ![]() Underwood Family Farms: This Moorpark farm, which leans toward pumpkins and away from horror, has filled its October with Fall Harvest on the Farm events, beginning with a big pumpkin patch. Access to the pony rides, face-painting and pumpkin-decoration stations costs extra. An Ultimate Kids Pass ($30) gives a child access to slides, a bounce house, straw maze, giant rocking horses and a petting zoo. Bones Pumpkin Patch in Culver City aims for a family audience. Costumes are allowed for children or adults on those day, so long as you avoid “full face masks, weapons, obscenity or anything that could cause disturbance to either patrons or animals.” And which animals will be eating pumpkins? A black bear, a tortoise, meerkats, otters, elephants, hogs, hippos, jaguars, cassowaries, snow leopards, flamingos, piranhas, peccaries and howler monkeys. All activities are included in the zoo’s usual price of admission ($22 for adults and $17 for children ages 2-12). Zoo is running every day in October, with photo opportunities, trick-or-treat candy stations, “spook-tacular” science demonstrations, an extinct-animal graveyard and weekend pumpkin feedings and other activities, mostly between 10 a.m. The Velaslavasay Panorama offers visitors a variety of strange, immersive experiences. Lifestyle Exploring weird L.A.: The strange, immersive art of the Velaslavasay Panorama (There are VIP and Platinum options, too, which promise shorter wait times.) Bear in mind, parents and vegetarians, that the Dead End Diner includes overtones of cannibalism, and organizers warn that the event “may be too intense for children 12 and under.” 4730 Crystal Springs Dr., Los Angeles. For access to the hayride, trick or treat, Midnight Mortuary and Dead End Diner area, the cost is $39.99. For the hayride alone, admission begins at $29.99. Griffith Park: Haunted Hayride, a return attraction, is focused on an area transformed into the town square of Midnight Falls. 23, the park will host a Noche de Ofrenda (Night of the Offerings) with dance performances and calavera (skull) art workshops led by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art for all ages. The display, presented in partnership with Self Help Graphics & Art, will include more than 20 altars created by local artists and organizations, including a community altar designed by the National Endowment for the Arts’ 2018 National Heritage Fellow Ofelia Esparza. pays tribute to Día de los Muertos with a public art installation from Oct. Grand Park: This green space in downtown L.A. The event will feature live music, classic cars, dancers, altars, food trucks and vendors. ![]() 7 on Sherman Way between Topanga Canyon Boulevard and Canoga Avenue. The 21st Annual Dia de Los Muertos Family Festival, put on by Main Street Canoga Park, is set for 10 a.m. Proceeds support the school’s Huntley College of Agriculture’s farm operations, student clubs and outreach activities. All tickets must be purchased in advance. Wristbands offering unlimited access to activities are $14 on weekends and $11 on Fridays. Children under 3 get in for free with paid adult admission. On Fridays, admission is $5 for adults and $4 for seniors, children 3-12 and anyone with a Cal Poly Pomona ID. Admission is free on Wednesdays and Thursdays, but visitors must register online, and attractions are limited to the pumpkin patch and corn maze. The Insect Fair will not be held this year, due to COVID restrictions. Activities include hayrides, a corn maze, a sunflower patch, a petting farm (featuring Oreo, the celebrity lamb named last year in a popular contest), the new “Moo Moo Cow Train” pulled by an antique tractor, and a farmers market with campus-grown agricultural items, crafts and snacks. This year’s pumpkin patch will feature 30,000 Cal Poly-grown pumpkins for $5 to $7 each, plus farm demonstrations, live entertainment, food and a variety of activities at Cal Poly Pomona’s AGRIscapes Center. Ĭal Poly Pomona Pumpkin Fest: This tradition returns from 10 a.m. The Sivley family, which stages the all-ages event, calls it a “high intensity, walkthrough attraction filled with terrifying live monsters, amazing special effects and incredible sets.” (The monsters won’t touch you.) A $10 donation is recommended. īeware the Dark Realm in Santa Clarita is a free “home haunt” designed to raise money for the nonprofit Family Promise of Santa Clarita. Tickets available online, $5 students, $7 seniors and $10 adults. except as noted: “Pan’s Labyrinth” and “The Sixth Sense” (10 p.m.) on Oct. Academy Museum of Motion Pictures’ Oscar Frights! series presents Oscar-winning and -nominated horror films at the museum’s new sphere-shaped 1,000-seat David Geffen Theater, now through Oct. ![]()
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