Home-cooked schemes for Thanksgiving family gatherings amid COVID-19
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[November 19, 2020]
By Barbara Goldberg
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Masked servers will
deliver plates laden with turkey and fixings to a dozen relatives
separated into small pods in Kathleen Williamson's backyard in Maryland,
part of her scheme to dish up family togetherness at Thanksgiving.
With so many holiday traditions upended by COVID-19, families are
concocting ways to hold reunions with loved ones while keeping a safe
distance to guard against coronavirus spread.
Mounting infections have reached new highs across the country, with 41
states reporting historic increases in COVID-19 cases in November, 20
with record death tolls and 26 with record hospitalizations, according
to a Reuters tally of public health data.
In recent weeks, governors of at least 18 states have warned against
holiday get-togethers and imposed rules ranging from mask mandates to
tighter restrictions on indoor gatherings while awaiting a widely
available, effective vaccine that medical experts say is months away.
"I don't want to be done in by Thanksgiving," Williamson said in an
interview. "I don't want to meet my maker in our lovely hospital."
Williamson alternates annual holiday hosting with another set of
grandparents. And 2020 is her year, when a pandemic has already killed
more than 250,000 in the United States and more than 1.3 million
worldwide.
Americans like Williamson are hungry to spend the Nov. 26 holiday with
loved ones some have not seen since last Thanksgiving or since the
pandemic locked down much of the nation in March.
Near Philadelphia, one extended family said on Facebook that after an
outdoor Thanksgiving dinner those traveling from out of town will sleep
in rented recreational vehicles rather than in the home's guest beds.
In New Jersey, another woman said online that her extended family was
arranging an outdoor pot luck "so if it all goes to Hell, people can
still meet to grab food and bring home."
Williamson, a retired foreign service officer whose posts included
Central America, said, "I'm approaching this as though I'm planning a
conference, and there will be kids and dogs there."
Her overseas career featured assignments such as arranging last-minute
parties for visiting U.S. congressmen and other officials.
"That was training for this," Williamson said.
She sent ground rules for the traditional harvest feast in an email to
relatives such as "PLASTIC CUPS will be used, marked with your name so
you don't pick someone else's."
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People line up to receive free holiday boxes of food from the Food
Bank For New York City ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday, as the
global outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, in
the Harlem neighborhood of New York, U.S., November 16, 2020.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
Her holiday table is typically set with her finest Waterford Crystal
glasses and china plates, but this year the decor features paper
plates to avoid washing up.
She is allowing only one other family member in the kitchen with
her, the visiting grandfather, whose retirement from his medical
practice has allowed him to train in culinary arts.
"We will put the food on the kitchen table and each pod will select
a 'food getter.' WITH MASK ON," she wrote.
She said she would not allow gaiter masks whose effectiveness has
been disputed or those with valves that fail to stop virus spread to
be worn by family members, who include four senior citizens, five
other adults and three pre-teens, accompanied by four dogs.
"Promise me you'll take your temperature before you arrive," she
wrote to them in the email, adding that she had bought a temperature
gun.
Her dos and don'ts included everything from the locations of hand
sanitizers to proper bathroom use in the era of COVID-19 - "kids,
put the toilet seat down before flushing."
She also tried to enlist volunteers to help with the myriad
logistics required to ensure a safe, comfortable outdoor
celebration.
"Someone in charge of the fire pit? That means keeping it burning
and yelling at dogs that get too close to it," Williamson wrote.
(Reporting by Barbara Goldberg in New York; Additional reporting by
Gabriella Borter and Maria Caspani in New York; Editing by Richard
Chang)
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