British Columbia

CBC's trick-or-treat map is back! Tell us if your neighbourhood is a Halloween hot spot

Fill out our form on Halloween night. Tell us how many trick-or-treaters came to your door? What kind of candy you were giving out? This year, we're also asking respondents to share how they have adapted to the pandemic.

How many trick-or-treaters came to your door? What kind of candy are you giving out?

This Halloween display in Mill Bay, B.C., pays homage to front-line workers, including Dr. Bonnie Henry. (Michael McArthur/CBC)

This year has delivered a lot of scares, but Halloween need not be one of them.

B.C. health officials say Halloween is still a go despite the COVID-19 pandemic, but are asking people to stick to their own neighbourhoods. 

Will that change which neighbourhoods dominate for best candy? In 2019, Douglas Park, near Cambie Street and King Edward Avenue in Vancouver, and Trinity Street in East Vancouver, reported the highest numbers of trick-or-treaters. 

Could another neighbourhood rise from the undead? 

We'll only know if you fill in the form here starting Halloween night.

CBC British Columbia has teamed up with Simon Fraser University's City Program to put together a crowd-sourced map showing British Columbia's Halloween hot spots.

This year, we're also asking respondents to share how they have adapted to the pandemic and there's a new option to upload photos.

A chute descends from the top floor of a single-family house in Vancouver during Halloween.
Halloween decorations for this Vancouver house include a chute fitted to provide candy in a physically distant way. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Fill in the survey and watch your entry appear on the trick-or-treat map

If your entry doesn't appear right away, make sure you have included the city in the address, or try refreshing the page and zooming in.

On Sunday, we'll be able to tell you where the action was, where the ghost towns were and how many trick-or-treaters migrated out of their home neighbourhood.