Tips for Planning A Harvest Party

We recently hosted a harvest party that I'd been dreaming about for years! The autumn gathering, beneath our oaks and maples on a splendid fall day in New England, brought together our family and some young families that are dear to us. We began with activities for the kids, moved on to a candlelit dinner of chili cooked over a roaring fire, and ended with a dessert buffet while an

almost

full moon rose over the treetops. 

So many people have written to ask for my harvest party planning tips, that I thought I'd tell you how our fall party came together, so it will make things easier for anyone who wants to host a harvest party for their family and friends.

DREAMING

Start by dreaming up what your ideal harvest party will be. No rules. No limits. Just dream. Ours began as a dream of mine and it just sort of percolated in my head for several years. When you have so many ideas in your head that you feel you just can't keep track of them anymore, go to Pinterest and start a Harvest Party board (click

here

to see mine), and pin images that encapsulate all your harvest party plans. Again...no rules, no limits. Mine contains images for: food, what I might wear, music, games...but mostly the images revolve around the

feel

or the

vibe

I wanted it to have.

EDITING TO A MOOD BOARD

Now it's time to move those dreams into reality. My Pinterest Harvest Party board contains (at last count) 322 pins, but I could certainly

not

incorporate all of those ideas into a single party. To help edit all your pins/dreams into a reasonable/real party, it is

incredibly

helpful to create a party mood board. It's not

just

incredibly helpful, it's a game changer. It's a lovely, visual representation (and a goal reminder) of what you want to create. I created mine by copying and pasting images from my Pinterest board onto four, 8 1/2" x 11" Publisher documents which I labeled: Snacks, Menu, Kids' Activities, and Ambiance. The mood board contains all the ideas you are actually going to use for your harvest party.

STRATEGIZING

Your mood board is an excellent place to pencil in notes to yourself as you make your plans more concrete. I used it to break down the pictures into lists of everything planned and lists of everything we would need. Here are how I elaborated on my mood boards to create our harvest party:

SNACKS

pretzels, popcorn, dried apricots, apples, mixed nuts, cider

sliced chicken sausage for roasting with assorted mustards

(Here I made notations that I would need cups for cider,

a crock for nuts, a nutcracker, etc.)

MENU

Chili

(Jenny Steffens Hobick's is the best! Click

here

for recipe.

Note: 1 1/2 batches served 15 adults.)

Chili Fixings - tortilla chips, Frittos, sour cream, green onions, shredded cheese, cilantro

Mac-n-Cheese

(for the kids)

Cornbread

Harvest Salad

Cheeses

Olives

Wine and Hard Cider

Plum Almond Crumble

Apple Pie Bars

(click

here

 for recipe)

Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Bread

S'mores

KIDS' ACTIVITIES

bobbing for apples

(need: a large, galvanized tub, apples with stems to make it easier for small children)

pumpkin carving

(need: pumpkins, tables, spoons, knives)

donut "catching"*

(need: donuts, string, slender piece of wood)

ring toss onto pumpkins

(need pie pumpkins with tall, straight stems, rings)

* Buy lots of donuts, because adults will want to play too!

AMBIANCE

Here I listed everything we'd need for practicality and atmosphere.

pumpkins, cornstalks, tables/chairs, wool blankets, skewers, trash cans, firewood, napkins, string of lights, hay bales, flower/leaves, mini pumpkins for little ones to take home, flatware, lanterns, etc.

DOING

Issue your invitations and you've got the ball rolling! We kept invites simple with just a Facebook message group invite.

Yes, it's a fair amount of work to host a harvest party. But it creates such happy memories for everyone, that it's

completely

worth all the effort. I would say that it took me about four days of concerted effort to pull everything together -- shop, make food, etc. And it took three of us about four hours to set up the day of the party. Enlisting help of willing family and friends would be a great idea! In addition to the smiles on everyone's faces, the laughter of the kids, and the general air of relaxed happiness that hung over the party, I will long remember it as one of the funnest parties we've had in ages!

Happy Harvest Party planning!