Dalia Meshirer waves to a friend as Golder Ranch Fire District trucks begin to roll by her Oro Valley home. Dalia called her eighth birthday her best ever.

Dalia Meshirer’s eighth birthday party was canceled.

Her family also planned two birthday trips for her β€” one to Pinetop, the other to Santa Barbara.

Both were canceled amid the coronavirus pandemic that has gripped Tucson and the globe.

β€œShe wasn’t mad or throwing a tantrum,” Dalia’s mom, Kelley Meshirer, says. β€œShe was just heartbroken. She just started crying β€” she had the most grieving, sorrowful cry.”

Imagine Dalia’s surprise two weeks later when she stood in her driveway watching a parade of cars β€” including Oro Valley police cruisers and Golder Ranch fire engines β€” passing through her family’s street to wish her a happy birthday.

Upon learning her party was canceled, Dalia Meshirer let out β€œthe most grieving, sorrowful cry,” her mom said. A little over two weeks later, she basked in her friends’ birthday wishes.

While stay-at-home orders and social distancing practices are putting a damper on traditional celebrations, communities are donning their creative thinking caps, rallying to connect in ways not seen before.

Meshirer got the idea from someone online. β€œOK, I can do that,” Meshirer said, before she posted details about Dalia’s celebration to her Facebook page, where she’s friends with some first responders.

Meshirer decided to keep the parade a secret from Dalia. The morning of her birthday, Meshirer took her to someone else’s car parade.

When Dalia and her mom were almost back to their Oro Valley home, a few cars were early and started to line the street.

β€œShe was like, β€˜Why are all these cars here?’” Meshirer says. β€œI was like, β€˜Do you think they’re doing another birthday parade?’ and she’s like, β€˜Today’s my birthday!’”

Levi Green was in line with dozens of friends and classmates waiting to pass by Dalia Meshirer’s home and wish her a happy eighth birthday.

But Dalia just thought the parade would consist of the six cars she saw lined up. She didn’t know the parade would last the next 45 minutes, packed with about 30 of Meshirer’s Facebook friends, plus the waves of law enforcement officers who cruised by.

Dalia called it her β€œbest birthday ever.”

After celebrating a 45-minute drive-by birthday celebration in Oro Valley on April 2, Dalia took a moment minute to look through the gifts she received.

β€œTo have such a 180 from March 15 when she was so sad, to April 2 when she was so excited β€” it was the community that made that happen,” Meshirer says. β€œI couldn’t have pulled that off if they didn’t show up.”

β€œIt exceeded my wildest dreams,” she says.

Dalia runs up to fist-bump Asher Green, one of the dozens of kids who showed up for her drive-by birthday parade, which her mom kept secret until the big day.

Another girl in the Tucson area had a similar experience β€” but hers was more of a social-distancing scavenger hunt.

McKenzie Ortega recently turned 7 and, like Dalia and many other kids, her party was canceled.

McKenzie’s mom Amanda Ortega posted in her neighborhood watch’s Facebook group and on the Nextdoor app, asking if neighbors could craft the number seven and stick it somewhere in their front yards. The plan, dubbed the β€œseven hunt,” was to drive through the neighborhood and count how many sevens they could find. It was an idea Ortega, a preschool teacher, had heard of through one of her students’ parents.

Ortega was expecting only a few people to put up signs.

Instead, neighbors from 50 to 60 houses β€” many of whom Ortega didn’t know β€” participated. It took an hour and a half for the Ortega family to wind through the Vail neighborhood.

Some neighbors put up several sevens in their yards, some wrote messages in chalk across their driveways. Others gave gifts to McKenzie, and at one house β€” where a mariachi group lives β€” McKenzie was serenaded.

β€œShe kept saying, β€˜This is my best day ever,’” Ortega says.

β€œThey really made not only her day but our day,” Ortega says of her neighbors. β€œI had no idea how I was going to make this birthday special, but it was over-the-moon special.”

By the end of the night, McKenzie was wondering how she’d be able to send so many thank-you cards.

A few days later, Ortega set up a virtual chat with McKenzie’s friends and none other than a snow queen.

The snow queen is actually Stephanie Reed, who dresses as princesses for children’s birthday parties. She lives in Virginia, but her dad lives in Ortega’s neighborhood.

Although parties were canceled, Reed and a colleague wanted to find a way to give back and keep bringing the magic to kids β€” virtually. Reed doesn’t charge a fee, but she accepts tips.

β€œI think there’s a level of understanding that the kids have, depending on their age range, about what’s happening in the world right now,” Reed says, adding that when she’s in princess mode, she acts as though the pandemic is happening in her world, too.

Although the princess can’t be with the kids physically, Reed says they still get excited.

β€œI would say that there’s the same amount of excitement or they’re just extremely starstruck,” Reed says. β€œI was nervous starting out because I was wondering, virtually, how it’s going to be the same, and I would say I haven’t seen any difference.

β€œIt just breaks up the isolation and gives people a little bit of joy back into their lives.”


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Contact reporter Gloria Knott at gknott@tucson.com or 573-4235. On Twitter: @gloriaeknott