Apple bobbing, also known as bobbing for apples, is a game often played on Halloween and Bonfire Night. The game is played by filling a tub or a large basin with water and putting apples in the water. Because apples are less dense than water, they will float at the surface. Players (usually children) then try to catch one with their teeth. Use of arms is not allowed, and the hands are often tied behind the back to prevent cheating.
In Scotland, this may be called " dooking" Apple dookers make record attempt , BBC News, 2 October 2008 (i.e., ). In northern England, the game is often called apple ducking or duck-apple. In Ireland and Newfoundland and Labrador, "Snap Apple Night" is a synonym for Halloween. Dictionary of Newfoundland English , George Morley Story, W. J. Kirwin, John David Allison, p500, Another variation involves using the mouth to drop a fork from above to 'catch' the apple.
While bobbing for apples is the most common, other times the apples are substituted for nuts (most commonly hazel or chestnut).
In Scotland, alongside dooking for apples, treacle scones, smeared in additional treacle, are strung from the ceiling at Halloween.
Both apple bobbing and an apple on a string in 18th-century Ireland are mentioned by Charles Vallancey in his book Collectanea de Rebus Hibernicis.
A maiden who placed the apple she bobbed under her pillow was said to dream of her future sweetheart.
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