Cal Thiesing, 12, lives for Oct. 31.
So do friends and neighbors who come to the Thiesing (rhymes with sneezing) family's annual Halloween party to see what horrors Cal has created inside the garage. I'm told that last year there was a long line outside the family's Minneapolis garage.
According to Cal's proud grandmother, Judy Saumer, of Eau Claire, Wis.: "His actual first haunted house was a cardboard box that he described to his mother before falling asleep [one night when he was 5]. She helped him find it, paint it, cut out doors and windows, finally, adding lighting and sound."
Cal's 2015 haunted house is a long way from a cardboard box.
Now, there are animatronics in the garage, which Cal partitioned off to create a creepy labyrinth.
"The animatronics go on their own," said Allison Thiesing, mother of the Anthony Middle School seventh-grader. "He has some friends who are actors who will scare you. They have rehearsals. He feeds them and gives them breaks. It's pretty funny. When he blows the whistle, it's free time. When he blows the whistle again, it's time to get back to work. He lives for this. He dog-sits to raise money, walks dogs. He saves all his birthday money, asks for Halloween stuff for Christmas. His whole year is all about Halloween."
Last year's Halloween theme was creepy clowns. This year the garage, which has been expanded to accommodate the haunting project, has been transformed into what's being called "Cal's Zombie Horror House." It's spectacular. You wouldn't imagine this was the work of a 12-year-old. But Cal is poised and intelligent beyond his years.
"I like it because I like to make the layout and electrical work and train the actors and paint the stuff or bloodying up old props that don't look as cool [until] after I spray-paint them," said Cal. " I just like scary stuff."