Anonymous wrote:We had a party at a nature center that only allowed cake. I made that clear on the invitation so that people weren't expecting food.
Similar to this PP, we had a party at a park where we had to bring everything in on foot for a LONG way, so I had the party from 2-4 on purpose so that we wouldn't have to bring in a ton of food. We still served watermelon, pretzels/other munchees, juice/milk/water, and cake. Drop off so no parents.
We had a party at a nature center that only allowed cake. I made that clear on the invitation so that people weren't expecting food.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are the GUESTS' manners in this thread? Why not be gracious about the amount of effort hosting is and think "that's nice they invited me." Seems to me that is someone opens their house and goes to the trouble of organizing a party, guests could be happy about that and a less b*tchy about some of these other details...
I always make sure we eat at home before going to a party (either breakfast, lunch, or a heavier snack) bc I usually don't like much the party food, and prepare to mingle than eat ravenously, but still, I appreciate the snacks / nibbles that are put out.
IMO if someone goes through the trouble of organizing a party, they should throw out something for guests to at least nibble on. I have never been to a party where there was no food, I never hosted a party with no food, and cannot understand why it is so tough to throw some crackers / cheese at least on a table for those guests who may be hungry. Guests' manners in this thread are there, it may be safe to assume that the posters above said nothing other than 'thanks, what a wonderful party, we had so much fun' to their ungracious hosts. Why organize a party around lunch time and not offer at least some food? I would find it strange.
Anonymous wrote:I can tell you that as the mom of a DS allergic to milk, parties stink. No pizza, no cake, no ice cream, no milk boxes, no Cheetoes, no Doritos. You think milk isn't everywhere, but it is, and you think it's easy "just to pack him a lunch and bring it and we understand". What happens in practice is he leaves every party hungry or eats before he goes. Or we just don't attend.
Anonymous wrote:We had to stop to get fast food after a birthday party today.
Since when did parents stop serving food at birthday parties?
All the parties we have gone to in the past served at least pizza. I always serve full meals at our parties.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably the host reads DCUM and is afraid to serve anything other than organic carrots and water to avoid offending the sensibilities of the guests. Seriously, you can't win.
I was wondering the same thing. Nothing with eggs, peanuts, strawberries, dairy products, juice, wheat and gluten free. Of course, they aren't serving food because water is the only safe thing to serve and some of you would complain about this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are going to a party from 12:30-2 and was told by the host there will be no lunch served. I was steaming. That is lunchtime, my dc will be hungry so I have to carry lunch with me for him. What are thinking.
they were thinking you could eat lunch at noon (what?) or eat on the way there, its called a drive-through. or if you dont eat fast food pack a little lunch bag with a sandwich and a cheese stick and an apple
what are you people going to do when your kids have evening activities when they are older? write the coach a note that snowflake will be late for practice due to a scheduled dinner time?
Not all birthday parties are right next door to your house. If we ate lunch at noon at home, we'd be late for the party.
12:30-2 is smack in the middle of lunch time. Can't believe they don't plan on serving lunch.
If I was financially strapped, I would host a smaller party and serve food to fewer guests. You don't have to invite the whole class. Small sandwiches or pizza really doesn't cost that much.