Coronavirus forces Americans to find Easter fun at least 6 feet apart
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[April 10, 2020]
By Barbara Goldberg
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Easter is a special
holiday for 6-year-old Nora Heddendorf. It's a day when she loves to get
dolled up in a fancy dress and shiny shoes, and have fun with family and
friends hunting for brightly colored eggs.
This year the coronavirus pandemic has forced her to adapt. She will
accessorize her Easter outfit with a white paper mask, blue disposable
gloves, and a container of disinfectant wipes. And after hearing that
her New Jersey town's annual egg hunt may be canceled, she came up with
the idea of a "rock hunt."
Nora's hunt not only substitutes brightly painted stones for eggs, which
are in short supply at some stores, but it also allows her neighbors to
do their hunting during their social-distancing walks.
"I was sad it was going to be canceled because of the virus," the
kindergartener told Reuters in a phone interview. "I want to make people
happy."
From the White House to small town parks, the pandemic has forced the
cancellation of traditional Easter egg hunts and "rolls" across the
United States, closed churches, and scotched plans for Easter meals with
extended families.
But many Americans are still finding ways to have holiday fun, from an
Oregon candymaker making chocolate bunnies wearing face masks to a Texas
church organizing a virtual egg hunt using the video game Minecraft.
Weeks ago, Nora and her mother started organizing her hunt in their town
of Medford Lakes. She assembled dozens of DIY kits, each containing five
rocks, four paint colors, and instructions, all wrapped in a plastic
bag. Of course, she wore disposable gloves and sprayed the contents with
disinfectant.
She then left the kits outside her home for pick-up by people who want
to participate. On her Facebook page, Nora's Rocks, the young artist
urged her community to return decorated rocks to her to hide.
"Thank you for helping Nora's Rocks bring our town together while
staying apart," said the instruction letter she included in the kits.
Her mother, Samantha Heddendorf, president of an environmental cleanup
company that has been decontaminating buildings affected by the
coronavirus crisis, said the hunt will start on Good Friday and continue
through Easter Sunday, with fresh batches of painted rocks hidden each
day.
The goal is to place 500 stone "eggs" in every nook and cranny of the 1
square mile (2.6 square km) town.
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Six-year-old Nora Heddendorf displays her do-it-yourself kits for a
painted rock hunt she and her mother are organizing in their town of
Medford Lakes, New Jersey, U.S., March 28, 2020 amid the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) outbreak. Samantha Heddendorf/Handout via REUTERS
"When people are doing their social distancing walks, they can look
for rocks - or so-called Easter Eggs. They can have something to
hunt for and pick them up and at least have a smile to celebrate
Easter with," Samantha Heddendorf said.
In Central Point, Oregon, chocolatier Jeff Shepherd had a brainstorm
to save his Lillie Belle Farms from shutdown in the wake of the
coronavirus. He told his Facebook followers that he would make "Covid
Bunnies" - milk and dark chocolate ones with white face masks and
white chocolate ones with blue face masks.
It was an instant hit. Shepherd was able to hire back the seven
full-time staff he had laid off, has sold 5,000 bunnies, and is
scrambling with back orders, now limiting purchases to six per
customer.
Safe distancing to thwart virus spread is what convinced the Tate
Springs Baptist Church in Arlington, Texas, to go digital with its
Easter Egg hunt, using Minecraft but disabling potentially scary
game elements like monsters.
"Our ultimate goal is to spread the gospel, but we want the kids to
still enjoy Easter," said Reverend Curtis James.
Back in New Jersey, Nora was excited that her idea was warmly
embraced by so many, with the town mayor stopping by to witness her
stuffing the kits and the local Lions Club inviting her for lunch
"when this whole thing is over."
Her favorite "thank you" was gift-wrapped rolls of toilet paper, one
of the staples - including eggs - being hoarded by people panic
buying during the pandemic.
"My mom smiled when the toilet paper came," Nora said.
(Reporting by Barbara Goldberg in New York; Additional reporting by
Rich McKay in Atlanta; Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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