Easter is a holiday built on traditions.
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Whether it's following centuries of church processions or years of family tradition going camping or heading down the coast, having a barbeque in the backyard or heading to the botanical gardens for the egg hunt - Easter is a time of traditions and habits.
Not in 2020.
Easter proved one of the most revealing examples of how much our lives have changed amidst the coronavirus pandemic as people were forced to stay home, to video chat with family, to stream church services online.
However, there was one tradition which carried on despite the restrictions - the delighted squeals of children run out across the city on Sunday morning proved not even coronavirus could stop Easter egg hunts at home.
The West households was one of those which had children madly and excitedly hunting for eggs.
Before moving to Orange, they family spent their Easters by the beach on the West Coast. This year, they were one of the lucky families spending Easter together, with Amanda moving in with her parents while she and husband James built a house.
Their children - Emily, who's nearly two, Felix, who's nearly four and Sophie, who's five, have had their worlds turned upside down by coronavirus, but Easter was the chance to provide some normality.
"They got up a million times asking if the Easter bunny had visited overnight," Mrs West said, laughing.
"There were eggs through the house, on bookshelves and in shoes and on chairs. It was chaos."
The Wests have had to do a lot of things inside since the lockdown began, which while has been hard on Amanda and James, has been even harder on their children.
Sophie started school at Catherine MacAuley Catholic School this year and "absolutely loved it" - until she was told to stay home.
"She keeps asking when she can go back, and even the other two kids love their day care," Mrs West said.
While the school had done a "good job" at explaining to kids what the virus meant in terms they could understand, like emphasising a personal space bubble and to not share water bottles, the West children still miss going to the park.
"We've got some good family friends and our youngest and their youngest are really good friends, so our two-year-old wants a play date, he keeps walking around saying "where Marshall?," Mrs West said.
But they're adapting. Both Mr and Mrs West work at Cadia, but their roles mean the pair can work from home, which Mrs West said was going exactly as you'd expect.
"It's madness," she said.
She acknowledged having her mother helping take care of the children was a luxury many others don't have, but trying to keep young children occupied is a question uniting parents across Orange as the world is turned upside-down.
Fortunately for most, a slice of normality returned with Easter eggs littered across backyards on Sunday, ending in chocolate-stained smiles.
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