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Selecting & Caring for Your Real Tree
Choosing a real Christmas tree is a fun outing for the whole
family and easy to do. Here are a few simple steps for selecting the
perfect tree.
In most households, the holiday season didn't begin until the
family went to the local lot or tree farm to pick out their tree.
Then, the whole family would decorate the tree. Gifts would be
wrapped and placed underneath it. And, on Christmas morning, the
family would once again join around the tree waiting for the
festivities to begin. The scent, aroma, and the real tree itself were
an integral part of the family unity as well as the holiday season
itself. This tradition continues to this day as more than 37 million
families celebrate with a real Christmas tree.

The celebrating of Christmas with a real tree has been a tradition
for over 400 years. At one time, all Christmas trees were cut from
natural stands (or straight out of the forest). As you can imagine,
these wild trees looked nothing like today's professionally grown and
sheared trees. Today, 98% of trees are grown on plantations. These
plantations may sell them to local lots, or act as choose and cut
farms where people go to select and cut down their own fresh
tree.
To make your tradition a more memorable and pleasant one, we'd
like to offer a few helpful hints when selecting a tree:
- Do a freshness test. Gently grasp a branch between your thumb
and forefinger and pull it toward you. Very few needles should
come off in your hand if the tree is fresh. Shake or bounce the
tree on its stump. You should not see an excessive amount of green
needles fall to the ground. Some loss of interior brown needles is
normal and will occur over the lifetime of the tree.
- Once you've chosen your tree, keep it in a sheltered, unheated
area such as a porch or garage to protect it from the wind and sun
until you are ready to decorate it.
- Before you set up your tree, make a fresh, straight cut across
the base of the trunk (about a quarter inch up from the original
cut) and place the tree in a tree stand that holds a gallon of
water or more.
- Warning: Keep the tree stand filled with water. A seal
of dried sap will form over the cut stump in four to six hours if
the water drops below the base of the tree, preventing the tree
from absorbing water later when the tree stand is refilled. If a
seal does form, another fresh cut will need to be made.
- A tree will absorb as much as a gallon of water or more in the
first 24 hours and one or more quarts a day thereafter. Water is
important because it prevents the needles from drying and dropping
off and the boughs from drooping. Water also keeps the tree
fragrant.
- In addition, keep your tree away from heat and draft sources
like fireplaces, radiators and television sets. Test your light
cords and connections before hanging them on the tree to make sure
they're in good working order. You don't want to use cords with
cracked insulation or broken or empty sockets. Also be sure to
unplug the lights before you go to bed or leave the house. Never
overload electrical circuits.
Sensible precautions such as these will help preserve the unique
beauty and tradition that only a real Christmas tree can provide.
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