ideas for bat mitzvah

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:We have been to so many. From the blowouts to the party at the house. I have to admit that our favorite over the years has been the private room at the local Mexican restaurant. There was a DJ, but the guy was great -- not dancing but more activity focused. Adults could talk and kids had fun.

What type of activities?


I can't remember the name of the DJ but I googled and found this one. We did some of these activities. Balloon ones, freeze dance, ring toss, etc.
Anonymous
One thing that I saw a few years ago when DD was of age was that many families had kid-centric parties in the evening and another affair in the afternoon. We did not, we had the traditional brunch.

But a Kiddush lunch-in for the families (or at the synagogue) may be a good way to go. Then, you can have a party primarily for her friends. You can invite a lot more kids without significantly impacting the price.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If you are on FB there is a planning group. What time of year? Could do bowling, zavazone, ropes course, etc.


Thanks. She would love zavazone and ropes course. But I was thinking of a bat mitzvah party as more multi-generational and less very expensive birthday party. And the grandparents would not enjoy either of those venues. Am I thinking about it wrong?


I don't know. But people on the FB group recommended it.


Those don't sound fun for grand parents.

Why not have a party at your home that evening for a few of your friends and a bunch of her friends. Hire a bartender and serve nice food. I don't really understand how a ropes course makes sense with the relatives in town.

Clearly don't have a party with noise and a DJ.


NP here. Has anyone had a party at their house? We are having a full kiddush lunch at the synagogue right after and we are trying to come up with a plan for the evening. We can't have a full party at the synagogue as part of the lunch because it's a conservative shul. We are debating either having a kid centered party (bowling or similar) in the evening or a party at our house with nice catering, etc. but didn't know if that would be fun enough for the kids.
Anonymous
Our kids were the same. We did Kiddush lunch after and a casual dinner at home that evening for family. Kid-centric event the following weekend. We did not invite out of town adult friends, and local adult friends were quite happy to eat a bagel in the afternoon and be done with it.
Anonymous
For our daughter last year, we did a nice kiddush luncheon at the synagogue with family and friends. On Sunday, about 30 of us went to Pinstripes in Georgetown for an amazing brunch and all had a great time bowling and playing bocce ball. Everyone had fun and it was a nice way to wrap the weekend up with out of town guests especially.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If you are on FB there is a planning group. What time of year? Could do bowling, zavazone, ropes course, etc.


Thanks. She would love zavazone and ropes course. But I was thinking of a bat mitzvah party as more multi-generational and less very expensive birthday party. And the grandparents would not enjoy either of those venues. Am I thinking about it wrong?


Bifurcate it, do a luncheon with the family after the service and then an evening event at one of the places.
Anonymous
I know someone who set up a casino and had a magician come perform an amazing show for the party. It was a lot of fun.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:For our daughter last year, we did a nice kiddush luncheon at the synagogue with family and friends. On Sunday, about 30 of us went to Pinstripes in Georgetown for an amazing brunch and all had a great time bowling and playing bocce ball. Everyone had fun and it was a nice way to wrap the weekend up with out of town guests especially.


Did you reserve a private room at Pinstripes or just reserve tables/lanes?
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