Posted on 12/06/2004 9:06:53 AM PST by NormsRevenge
GENEVA, Ill. - Greg Parcell isn't thinking about the 50,000 lights all around him, or the computer that has them blinking to the beat of "Let it Snow" on the radio.
Instead, his mind is on what's missing as he stands in what seems the one empty spot in his front yard.
"I still have to put up the penguins around the campfire," he says.
Parcell, 47, is a toy soldier in a growing army of Christmas enthusiasts becoming more sophisticated at turning yards into blazing monuments to the holidays.
New companies are cropping up with elaborate, automated decorations and the computer equipment to coordinate them, giving anyone with a wallet the ability to create scenes similar to a theme park.
Tens of thousands of people also have found a way to skip all those hours out in the cold hanging lights opting to hire private companies to deck their halls for anywhere from a few hundred dollars to thousands. One such company, Texas-based Christmas Decor, has grown from 300 customers to over 32,000 in the past eight years.
For anyone lacking ideas, the Internet has plenty to offer.
PlanetChristmas.com shows displays around the globe and gives homeowners a chance to swap ideas, see the latest gadgets and register for the next "Lights Up" symposium.
"It's taken off like wildfire and I'm quite excited about it," said Chuck Smith, the Web site's creator and a pioneer of huge computerized home displays.
Melissa Williams, an owner of Christmas Done Bright in Sevierville, Tenn., said customers, particularly middle-aged men, "want to decorate everything. They compete with their brothers and neighbors."
For Williams' company, that has translated to well over $1 million in sales of lighted wire silhouettes every year since 1999, up from $42,000 in 1992. The silhouettes range from a simple wreath to an elf that appears to be shooting presents from a cannon into a sack.
Dan Baldwin founded a company called Light-O-Rama two years ago after seeing the fuss people made about the display at his Garfield, N.J., home.
"It's pretty much addictive," Baldwin said. "We have people who say, 'Don't tell my wife. Can you not put the price in the box when you send it?'"
The price tag isn't the only enemy of holiday decoration enthusiasts there are also the neighbors.
Throughout the country, people upset over the noise, traffic and garbage that comes when people descend on their neighborhoods to view the displays have fought back in recent years.
In Little Rock, Ark., some residents were so upset about a display with 3 million lights said to be visible from 80 miles away that they got the state's supreme court to agree it was a public nuisance and order it scaled back.
In Monte Sereno, Calif., a couple whose huge display attracted thousands of passers-by angered neighbors and led the city council to require a permit for any exhibit lasting longer than three days. This year, the yard holds a 10-foot Grinch, its spiny finger pointing at the house of the neighbors who initiated the complaints.
Smith, of PlanetChristmas.com, decided to give his neighbors in Franklin, Tenn., a bit of a break. After the crush of visitors forced him to hire off-duty police officers to direct traffic, he moved his show to a nearby church where there's more room.
Meanwhile, Greg Cornwell has nothing bad to say about Parcell's house across the street, but he's bracing for the crowds and the looks from people when he tries to get his car into his driveway.
"They think I'm trying to cut in line," he said.
___
Holiday decorations and high-tech, computer-coordinated lights fill Greg Parcell's front yard Wednesday, Dec. 1, 2004, in Geneva, Ill. Parcell is one of many Christmas enthusiasts who are growing increasingly sophisticated at turning yards into blazing monuments to the holidays. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)
Whatever happened to the white candle light in the window?
Share your holiday displays here .. or not.
Ho Ho Ho.
Fire hazard, I guess.
Penguins around a campfire? What's that got to do with Christmas?
What a riot!!!!!!!!!
I still put them in all of my windows.
We have a buoy on a stand in our front yard, last year we wrapped it in Christmas lights with a strand connected to the lights on the house.....sort of looks like an ornament that fell off the tree.
Hey guys and gals - this is fun!!!!
Why would penguins even be AROUND a fire?
I remember one display in Delaware that always made the front page of the paper. People came from miles around. The guy's electric bill was over $3,000 for the season. People actually started giving him money toward the bills.
Hey, just leave them up year round like we do. (I guess its time to get rid of that Jack-O-Lantirn)
I tried to convince my husband to do that last year - but he wouldn't, said the weather would get to them, making it more difficult to deal with them this year.
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