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Care and Feeding of Cut Christmas TreesHow to Choose, Store, Water, and Preserve a Cut Holiday Tree Indoors
Christmas trees are a festive and popular holiday decoration, setting the tone for the season. Proper selection and care will keep them merry and bright for the duration.
Cutting down a Christmas tree to decorate is a tradition dating back at least two centuries to a time when it was the norm to bring the family into the woods and drag back a newly-felled evergreen. Cutting one’s own is an option that was joined by precut tree sales in 1851, and tree selection was thus made both more convenient and more complicated. Criteria for a Quality TreeThe ideal Christmas tree must be chosen with several criteria in mind:
Determining Tree FreshnessThe Garden Helper’s guide to Christmas trees offers some suggestions.
Corner lots that appear seasonally may vary quite a bit in the freshness of the inventory, depending on their suppliers. Farm stands that are connected to local agriculture may have fresher trees; ask where their trees are grown and how often they get a delivery to be certain. Preserving Christmas TreesTrees should be kept in a cold, sheltered area until it’s time to set them up – a garage or unheated porch is a good choice. When it’s time to bring the tree inside, cut off the bottom of the trunk at a slight angle. This removes a hardening layer of pitch that makes water absorption difficult. Set the tree up in its stand in a place away from big heat sources or strong direct light – these will only shorten the tree’s useful time as a safe holiday decoration. Fill the water tray and make sure the level doesn’t drop below the trunk as long as the tree is inside. Holiday lights should be as cool as possible – LEDs generate the least heat of tree lights made today. All the wiring should be checked carefully before placing on the tree – bare wires and brittle insulation are potentially dangerous situations, and any damaged light strings should be replaced. Cut Christmas trees can be cared for to minimize messes and fire hazards, and at the same time maximize the intoxicating smell of evergreen boughs that evokes such strong memories in so many people.
The copyright of the article Care and Feeding of Cut Christmas Trees in Tree Care is owned by Terence P Ward. Permission to republish Care and Feeding of Cut Christmas Trees in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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