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🐰How to Hold A Neighbourhood Easter Egg Hunt, From a Distance

Easter might look again different this year, but can still be a special time for our kids

By Kyrie Collins, publisher of Macaroni Kid Highlands Ranch-Parker-Castle Rock-Lone Tree, Colo. March 24, 2021

The arrival of spring and the celebration of Easter always fills me with hope, even given the current situation. The days are growing longer and our world once again fills with colour as the trees sprout leaf buds and the first flowers begin to emerge.

Easter includes some of our family's favourite traditions, including an egg hunt. This year, though, scrambling around a park in search of candy-filled plastic eggs isn't an option.

With most in-person events cancelled and church services still taking place online, Easter will once again be different in 2021, but that doesn't mean it can't still be a special time filled with happy memories.

Macaroni Kid has an idea to help you create a fun neighbourhood Easter egg hunt while still practising social distancing. Kids will have as much fun decorating their eggs as hunting for them!

1. Print our FREE Easter egg designs

You can get four designs — including a plain egg — here!




2. Colour and hang in windows

Encourage your kids to be creative in their designs and decorations. They can use stickers and stencils to create their own look! If you have green construction paper, cut it lengthwise in a zigzag pattern to make grass so your eggs have somewhere to "sit."

Make as many eggs as you want and put them up in the windows of your house facing toward the street. You don't have to wait for Easter! Kids are out walking every day, so give them a little joy with a colourful unexpected "treasure" to find.

You can also decorate both sides of your eggs so that you have eggs facing out toward your neighbours as well as a little extra Easter decor inside your home.

Don't forget to join the Chestermere Window Gallery Group and show off your windows, and those that you find on your walks. 

3. Share this article with people you know

The more people who participate, the more fun this Easter egg hunt will be! Share this story with friends on Facebook, with neighbourhood groups, and anyone else you know who might want to take part!

4. Hunt for eggs!

Take the kids for a walk and see how many eggs you can "collect" along the way. Bonus: Walks offer fresh air and exercise that are good for the whole family.








Together, we can add a little fun and colour to our neighbourhoods and give our kids some joy -- even on this most unusual of Easters.

Kyrie Collins is the publisher of Macaroni Kid Highlands Ranch-Parker-Castle Rock-Lone Tree, Colo.