{"id":92326,"date":"2022-10-26T02:30:00","date_gmt":"2022-10-26T10:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/haunted-garage-seeks-to-scare-up-donations\/"},"modified":"2022-10-26T02:30:00","modified_gmt":"2022-10-26T10:30:00","slug":"haunted-garage-seeks-to-scare-up-donations","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/haunted-garage-seeks-to-scare-up-donations\/","title":{"rendered":"Haunted garage seeks to scare up donations"},"content":{"rendered":"
Dan Earl might not have any skeletons in his closet but he’s got plenty in his garage, and after nearly two decades of scaring the Juneau community, he’s still running strong.<\/p>\n
“I’ve been doing this for a little over 19 years now and it’s just slowly been getting bigger and bigger,” Earl said. “I just feel like it’s good to give back to the community whatever way you can.”<\/p>\n
Earl’s Haunted Garage at 9420 Berners Ave., is ready to chill and thrill again from 6-11 p.m on Saturday, Sunday and Monday Oct. 29, 30 and 31. While some of the attractions inside might have changed, the cost of admission has not and canned food donations or $2 still gets you through the door. Earl said all of the donations go to Helping Hands and Southeast Alaska Food Bank as well as other local food pantries in Alaska.<\/p>\n
“Canned food drives are really needed in this community. Thanksgiving is coming and with inflation everything’s been tough on people and families, so we want to be able to help out wherever we can.”<\/p>\n
Earl, who works as an AT&T Alascom facilities mechanic during the daytime, said he started his all-ages haunted garage initially as a way to keep himself busy while staying home with his daughter who was newly born at the time.<\/p>\n
“The first motivation was that my daughter was born, so I stayed home with her and my job was done in October, so to keep myself busy while she was napping I thought, ‘Hey, I’ll build a witch,’” Earl said. “And then from that it became, ‘Oh, I’ll build a Frankenstein and put it in the driveway.’ And then that kind of built to more pieces and more pieces and then I bought a house with a garage and then I was like, ‘Oh, what can I do now?’ Then I tore my garage down and built a bigger garage, and thought, ‘Okay, I guess I’m doing something bigger now.’”<\/p>\n
According to Earl, it’s been slowly growing bigger ever since and while many of the original kids from the neighborhood have since grown up, there’s no shortage of newer generations laying on the pressure to keep the tradition going.<\/p>\n
“I was thinking of taking a year off, but then you see all of the new kids going, ‘That was the best thing last year, hope you’re doing it again,’” Earl said. “You kind of get guilted back into it, but you like to see that, meet new people, plus these kids that are fearless all of a sudden aren’t so fearless, so that’s fun.”<\/p>\n
Families with young children can rest easy because Earl said there’s nothing alive to jump out and startle folks as they make their way through. Relying on animatronics and lighting only, Earl said this event is more about taking your time rather than running scared.<\/p>\n
“It’s more if you were to go down south to like Disneyland or something, the more times you walk through it, the more you see,” Earl said. “You never know what’s around the next corner and there could be something you missed. Depending on how busy the day or night is or that hour, I normally allow people to go through it multiple times, so that way they can see what they might have missed because they’re in a hurry the first time. And then, of course, with doing it three nights it gives people opportunities to come back and go, ‘Oh, I want to see it again, I know I missed something.’”<\/p>\n