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The Shadows attraction in Fawn isn't scaring anyone this Halloween | TribLIVE.com
Valley News Dispatch

The Shadows attraction in Fawn isn't scaring anyone this Halloween

Joyce Hanz
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Joyce Hanz | Tribune-Review
A ghoul waits to scare visitors at The Shadows Haunted Attraction in Fawn last year. The popular outdoor attraction will remain closed this season because of the covid-19 pandemic.
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Joyce Hanz | Tribune-Review
The Shadows Haunted Attraction co-organizer Chuck Lynn of Tarentum opened the outdoor scare trail next to the Tour-Ed Mine nine years ago.
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Joyce Hanz | Tribune-Review
The Shadows, an outdoor wooded haunted attraction in Fawn, normally features scare stations set up along an outdoor wooded walking trail. It is closed this season because of the covid-19 pandemic.

The screams are silent this season at a popular Halloween destination in Fawn.

The Shadows, Alle-Kiski’s only outdoor haunted attraction, announced late last month on Facebook that it would not open for the season.

Co-owner Chuck Lynn said the decision not to open was made because of covid-19.

“It was a terribly hard decision to make, but we have some volunteers with medical conditions, and we didn’t think it would be safe,” Lynn said.

It would have been the ninth operating season for The Shadows, usually open Thursdays through Saturdays during October.

Lynn said he has received about 100 phone calls from people inquiring about whether The Shadows would open.

“We’re upset we can’t open, and the public is bummed,” Lynn said.

The quarter-mile haunted trail normally offers visitors a 20-minute, self-guided walk in the dark, through woods next to the Tour-Ed Mine & Museum.

Scare stations, illuminated by real campfires and limited lighting, have depicted a cemetery, shantytown, hospital, camp and more, manned by volunteer ghoul actors.

The Shadows is set amid 13 acres on land owned by the Alle-Kiski Valley Historical Society, leased annually by The Shadows.

Longtime volunteer Dolly Mistrik usually staffs the ticket booth. She’ll miss interacting with visitors.

“I’ll miss the reactions of the children coming and going,” Mistrik said. “I think it was the right move this year, though.”

Lynn said money raised goes back into the operating costs and are donated to local Pittsburgh-area charities.

Lynn expected to lose thousands of dollars by not opening this season.

“We plan to open next year and will work on building a better haunt,” he said.

Joyce Hanz is a native of Charleston, S.C. and is a features reporter covering the Pittsburgh region. She majored in media arts and graduated from the University of South Carolina. She can be reached at jhanz@triblive.com

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Categories: Local | Valley News Dispatch
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