Things To Ponder While Eating Halloween Candy

Oct 28, 2009 By Chris Gorski, ISNS
Things To Ponder While Eating Halloween Candy

For kids, ringing a neighbor's doorbell, yelling "trick or treat," and receiving candy brings plenty of smiles, but for many the real fun of Halloween happens when you turn your plastic jack-o'-lantern candy bucket upside down, unleashing a candy tsunami onto a tabletop or bedspread. From there it's easy to pick out the holiday-inappropriate items that somehow made it into the mix -- kids need pencils, and eating the occasional apple is swell, but not on Halloween night.

Some kids eat their favorites right away while others try to make their candy last for weeks, rationing the specially-sized packages as well as self-control allows. For some, it's important to count up all the pieces, split them into categories, and trade with siblings -- four packs of raisins for a Butterfinger, or maybe a handful of candy corn for a Hershey's bar.

Well, maybe that last one is what kids who end up writing for Inside Science News Service do.

Here are a few facts to chew on this :

• The U.S. Census Bureau estimates that there are 36 million potential trick-or-treaters this year -- aged 5 to 13. If the average kid knocks on 25 doors, occupied housing units throughout the country will average nine costumed visitors (occupants who dole out countless bags of candy every year may beg to differ).

• If each of those houses decided to give out Snickers Fun Size bars, that would require that adults purchase 23 million bags to provision their visitors. Countering the calories from all of that confectionary magnificence would require that a team of a thousand 160-pound men complete 8,000 Ironman Triathlons (calculation preformed with help from an online calories-burned calculator from Stevens Creek Software).

• Farmers in major pumpkin producing states produced 1.1 billion pounds of pumpkins in 2008, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, almost 4 pounds for every person in the country. Illinois alone produced 496 million pounds -- 38 pounds for every state resident, or enough pumpkin per capita to make about 8 big pies and set a couple aside to carve into jack-o'-lanterns.

• 9 billion candy corn pieces are produced every year -- according to Candy Corn Wonderland -- which, depending on your own deeply personal feelings, is either way too many or way too few per person. For the record, that means that each U.S. resident's ration is about 30 pieces.

By the way, if you would like to know about how far someone would have to walk to work off some common satisfying, but calorie-rich Halloween treats, take a look at this online calculator from About.com.

Happy Halloween!

Source: Inside Science News Service

ISNS


Explore further: US: NYU researchers took bribes from Chinese group

add to favorites email to friend print save as pdf

Related Stories

Food 'tricks' that combat sneaky, creepy Halloween treats

Oct 30, 2007

The sneakiest, creepiest surprise this Halloween may actually be in the candy dish. In a study being presented this Saturday at the American Heart Association conference in Orlando shows that people at only half as many mini-size ...

The Medical Minute: There's no trick to a safe Halloween

Oct 21, 2009

(PhysOrg.com) -- Halloween is supposed to be a spooky night, but parents don’t have to be scared about their kids’ safety if they follow some simple safety tips from Safe Kids Dauphin County, led by the Penn State Hershey ...

Ornamentals to Brighten the Fall Garden Palette

Oct 02, 2009

(PhysOrg.com) -- With “trick-or-treaters” coming soon, imagine two spirited new pepper varieties making an appearance in your neighborhood as well. The new pepper cultivars have been released by the Agricultural ...

The Medical Minute: There's no trick to a safe Halloween

Oct 22, 2008

Halloween is supposed to be a spooky night, but parents don’t have to be scared about their kids’ safety if they follow some simple safety tips from Safe Kids Dauphin County, led by Penn State Hershey Children’s Hospital, ...

Recommended for you

US: NYU researchers took bribes from Chinese group

May 20, 2013

Three New York University researchers from China divulged results from a U.S.-funded study to Chinese competitors in exchange for tuition, rent and other expenses, federal prosecutors said Monday.

US scientist not involved in classified research: witnesses

May 17, 2013

Colleagues of a US scientist found hanged in Singapore last year told a coroner's inquiry Friday he was not involved in projects with military applications and was never asked to compromise any country's national security.

User comments : 1

Adjust slider to filter visible comments by rank

Display comments: newest first

dirk_bruere
5 / 5 (1) Oct 28, 2009
And in the spirit of Halloween don't forget to reassure them that you have not poisoned any of it!

More news stories