Their favorite targets are snack-sized chocolate bars (70%), candy-coated chocolate pieces (40%), caramels (37%) and gum (26%). Not only do parents swipe candy form their kids’ bags, they invade them big time - they eat one candy bar out of every two a child brings home. ![]() According to the National Confectioners Association, 90% of parents confess they occasionally dip into their kid’s stash. If you’ve ever swiped candy from your kid’s trick or treat bag, you’re certainly not alone. What do you steal from your kids’ Trick or Treat bags? What do you go for first?ĭon’t feel guilty if you have. Big box stores don’t wait for mid-October to start stocking their shelves - by the second week in September most of them have already filled their shelves with orange and black trimmed packages of mini-candy boxes and bars – right along side the school supplies. ![]() Halloween and the week afterward account for about 5% of all candy consumed for the year. Is there Halloween candy in your future (or present)? It’s pretty hard to escape because candy is everywhere – on desks, in restaurants, even in my veterinarian’s office in a purple bowl with a dog bone painted on the side.
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