"We'll be swashbuckling on the deck," she said.
Kurt Anderson, who has lived on the street for seven years, spun a giant web around his courtyard for the kids.
"It's going to be really busy tomorrow," he said. "I'm going to get home from work as soon as I can."
Halsey Wickser conveys a health message in his decorations this year, which include depictions of three crime scenes where fast food is the culprit.
The display includes a skeleton wearing a Coca-Cola shirt holding a bucket of Kentucky Fried Chicken, a chalk outline of a body that has Twinkies strewn about it and a pot-bellied man dripping with red fluid. A sign over the last display reads, "Blood or Ketchup?"
"It's called 'Fast Food Fatality,'" Wickser said.
Geneva Street's ghoulish popularity grew out of the efforts of John Tucker, who lived in the house across from Arnall for 26 years.
"When we first moved into our house 11 years ago, we saw John Tucker's house across the street and it was incredible," she said.
Tucker moved onto the street in 1976.
"It was my wife and I's first house and we got excited about it," Tucker said.
Geneva Street has become the unofficial "Halloween Town," said Tucker. He still comes to Geneva Street to participate every year.
"Last year I gave out 1,200 candy bars," he said. "I don't think anyone would believe me, but if you come, you'll see the foot traffic."
Houses in the nearby Royal Canyon neighborhood also show their Halloween spirit. Particularly Susan Blasco's house on the corner of Del Norte Drive and Royal Boulevard.
The house already has an imposing façade, but the 50 or so ghosts hanging between trees, sneering plastic rats and rows of tombstones add to the eerie effect.
"We try to make it scary," Blasco said. "Sometimes when the little ones come and get scared, we feel bad."
Though it may not be as hectic as on Geneva Street, Blasco's neighborhood has quite a bit of foot traffic, she said.
"Sometimes there's a line going in and out," she said. "We don't even shut the door, we just sit there and give out candy."
Blasco worked on her house for about a month. Neighbors enjoy the house so much, they often push her to get it done, she said.
"There's definitely an expectation that it will be done," she said.
But the reaction from kids and the neighborhood makes it all worthwhile.
"We do it because it makes people happy. It's our gift to the community," she said.