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Pretty as they are, the leaves changing color isn’t the only reason to be excited about the arrival of the fall. For instance: these 5 weird and wonderful fall events.

  1. Festival of the Dead – Salem, Massachusetts
    Thanks to its legendary witch trials in 1692, Salem will forever be associated with witchcraft. Salem has in many ways embraced its occult identity. There’s a neighborhood called Witchcraft Heights. Police cars are adorned with a witch logo (oh, how the tables have turned in the last 300 years). And throughout October, Salem hosts the Festival of the Dead – a series of macabre events that include the Witches’ Halloween Ball and Vampires’ Masquerade Ball, as well as the chance to hunt ghosts (we said hunt, not bust), foretell the future and contact the departed.
  2. Kennywood Phantom Fright Nights – West Mifflin, Pennsylvania
    Kennywood is an old-school amusement park with a great mix of classic wooden coasters and more state-of-the-art steel hypercoasters. They might not be the most extreme attractions in the country, but riding them in the pitch dark is a whole new level of thrills. And by thrills, we mean pulse racing, sweaty palms, and wobbly knees levels of terror. Phantom Fright Nights runs late September through late October.
  3. The Haunted Graveyard – Bristol, Connecticut
    Lake Compounce has a scary attraction of an altogether different variety. Turn up at dusk on a Friday, Saturday or Sunday night and you can explore a series of haunted buildings and spaces in the dark. For around half an hour your mind and body go on edge (we’re not joking – this is no children’s attraction) as you wander around the ‘slaughterhouse,’ ‘cemetery’ and ‘manor’, all the while encountering werewolves, zombies, demons, vampires and witches.
  4. Trailing of the Sheep – Ketchum and Hailey, Idaho
    This honoring of the local century-old sheep industry is a bit like South Dakota’s buffalo roundup [http://news.cheapflights.com/tag/custer-state-park-buffalo-roundup/], but with sheep. Ketchum lies on an old trail linking high summer mountain pastures with winter desert fields. Each October, a 1,600 strong flock of ewes is herded through the small town on the final leg of its annual migration up and down the trail. It’s all a big excuse for a festival of parades, a fair, handicraft workshops and local restaurants serving up lamb specialties.
  5. Circleville Pumpkin Show – Circleville, Ohio
    Everyone should make it to a pumpkin show at least once in their life. You’ll never see a 1,600-lb pumpkin in your local grocery store. Of course, oversized fruits aren’t the only attractions. There is also the Pumpkin Queen parade and a pumpkin-pie (apple dare not speak its name here) eating contest, and the chance to chow down on a whole host of pumpkin-based delights like cookies, ice cream, fudge and doughnuts.

Written by insider city guide series Hg2 | A Hedonist’s guide to…

(Image: osseous)

About the author

Brett AckroydBrett hopes to one day reach the shores of far-flung Tristan da Cunha, the most remote of all the inhabited archipelagos on Earth…as to what he’ll do when he gets there, he hasn’t a clue. Over the last 10 years, London, New York, Cape Town and Pondicherry have all proudly been referred to as home. Now it’s Copenhagen’s turn, where he lends his travel expertise to momondo.com.

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