Posted by: Alison O’Connor, Larimer County Extension
Photo credit: Bert Cregg, Associate Professor, Dept of Horticulture, Michigan State University
Ahhhh…the holiday season. There’s nothing quite like it.
Crazed shoppers, long lines to mail packages, cookies and eggnog,
family and friends, and the pillar of many homes—the Christmas tree in the
living room.
If you’re a diehard fan of the fresh-cut Christmas tree,
have you ever really thought about how it’s grown? What it takes to go from
seed to tree to living room? There’s a lot to the process, which may surprise
you. As much time and effort goes into producing your Christmas tree (which you
keep for about a month) as the linden you planted in your front yard.
In the United States, most Christmas trees are produced in
Oregon and 92% of the trees grown in the state are exported. Other top
producing states are North Carolina and Michigan. In 2013, Oregon harvested 6.4
million trees growing on 63,000 acres of land. The predominate species grown in
the Pacific Northwest are Douglas-fir and Nobel fir, with their gorgeous, soft,
green foliage and perfect pyramidal shape (after some pruning, of course).
Sadly, our state tree, the Colorado spruce, while beautiful, is not a great
Christmas tree specimen, since its sharp, stabby needles make decorating painful. (Trust me on this. I once made a wreath from spruce branches. The wreath looked fabulous, but bleeding during the holidays is not fun.)
Here’s the thing…to produce a 6’ tree it can take as long as
12 years (concolor fir) or as short as 7 years (Douglas-fir). So that means trees
planted this summer will not be ready for harvest, at the earliest, until 2020.
That’s a long time for something that you can purchase pretty inexpensively and
only keep for a month.
It also means that for the 7-12 years your tree is in the
nursery, it’s being pruned, fertilized, sprayed, watered and weeded—all of
which takes labor. Christmas trees are like any other agriculture crop and are fairly
high maintenance. And growers carefully plan their harvests and
planting cycles to ensure they have trees to sell each year. Sadly, one grower in Washington may have lost up to 20% of their annual income due to a workers’
strike at the Port of Tacoma. Two thousand Christmas trees, bound for Hong
Kong, were stuck in a shipping container at the port to make the 23 day journey
across the ocean. And the Tillmans, who grew the trees, know a thing or two
about it, especially since their farm provided the tree to the White House in
2004.
The best seedlings are selected to grow the nicest trees. A
lot of research has gone into seedling selection and development—not only for
the overall look and shape of the tree, but also for resistance to insects,
disease and pathogens. The most labor intensive part of growing Christmas trees
is shaping and shearing. Shaping helps create a straight central leader
(important so your angel or star isn't crooked!), symmetrical form, dense
foliage and proper taper. There are USDA standards for Christmas tree shape and size. Shaping generally begins in the tree’s second or third
growing season. Some growers start earlier as they feel it leads to less work in
the future. Shearing is so important, that if a grower misses a cycle, it may
lead to culling the entire crop.
And then the day comes to harvest the Christmas tree and
make it the centerpiece of your holiday season. Harvesting any crop is often
hectic, but for growers in the Pacific Northwest, rainy weather can often
impact harvest time….plus, think of equipment driving on water-logged soils.
Compaction! Growers in Washington have actually enlisted the help of
helicopters to pull trees from the ground to reduce traffic on saturated soils.
Trees are harvested, sorted and baled…and then shipped to a store near you.
Generally the first trees arrive before Thanksgiving.
So as you sniff the fresh evergreen aroma of your
Tannenbaum, take a moment to thank the hard-working grower who made sure your
tree was the most perfect one in the lot. I’m reminded of the movie “A
Christmas Story” and Ralphie’s dad searching for the best one…and the salesman
repeating several times, “This here is a TREE!” Happy Holidays!
Replanting a seedling next to a harvested tree (Photo by Bert Cregg) |
Wow! I never knew! Kind of like not thinking about where your milk comes from - and how much work it takes someone to get it to you? Wonderful blog.
ReplyDeleteSeems kind of nutty we can't grow our own Christmas trees. Trees in Oregon grow fast, so lots of pruning/shearing is required to change their shape and make them bushy. Why not grow in a tougher place like CO where they would have a better overall shape to begin with. This might require less labor?, much less would be easier to ship, and be more sustainable. I remember this was why Christmas trees used to be grown on infertile glacial outwash soils around Puget Sound, for example.
ReplyDeleteHi Paul,
ReplyDeleteWhile it's a possibility, we are limited in Colorado with the irrigation needed to grow some nursery crops. We also have a much colder climate than the Pacific Northwest, which limits the species that can be grown. That said, there are many people who get a permit to harvest a tree from Colorado's forests. A lot comes down to consumer demand and preference.