When considering a Christmas tree this holiday season, “getting real” helps the environment and local economy at the same time.
Unlike artificial trees, real Christmas trees are recyclable and renewable resources that clean our water and our air and provide important habitat for wildlife.
Buying a real Christmas tree every year also supports Pennsylvania growers, which is good for the economy.
It is a small step we can take at holiday time that can lead to more resilient local waters and communities.
According to the National Christmas Tree Association, there are roughly 25 million to 30 million real Christmas trees sold in the U.S. every year.
The good news is, growers say there should be an ample supply of trees to choose from this holiday season, despite drought conditions across the region.
For some people, having a real Christmas tree is not a viable choice.
But, according to the NCTA, an artificial, petroleum-based tree is used for just six to nine years before it is disposed of, taking up permanent space in the local landfill.
The key to reducing the environmental impact of an artificial tree is to reuse it for many years.
At the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, we know a thing or two about the value of trees.
With roughly 300 partners across the Commonwealth, we are continuing the campaign to plant 10 million new trees for Pennsylvania, through the Keystone 10 Million Trees Partnership.
Our focus is on adding a wide array of native trees to the landscape.
Before being cut, real Christmas trees absorb air pollutants and sequester carbon dioxide and emit fresh oxygen.
Important to water quality, the trees stabilize soil and reduce erosion, reducing polluted runoff by filtering and absorbing pollutants that would otherwise flow into local rivers and streams.
Real trees are biodegradable and after the season can be recycled as mulch or compost, added to the landscape as food and habitat for wildlife, or placed into lakes and ponds to benefit aquatic life.
Many communities offer recycling programs and curbside pickup. You may even know a local farmer who would appreciate your tree as a tasty treat for their goats!
1,400+ Christmas Tree Farms In PA
Buying a real Christmas tree supports the more than 100,000 employees and nearly 15,000 farms in the United States.
Pennsylvania has over 1,400 Christmas tree farms, fourth-most in the nation behind Oregon, North Carolina, and Michigan.
Tree farms account for nearly 31,000 acres in the Commonwealth and about one million trees are cut each year.
Christmas trees are often grown on soil that doesn’t support other crops. Growers plant one to three new seedlings for every tree harvested.
Selecting and cutting your own tree is also an outdoor activity where family memories are created.
The Pennsylvania Christmas Tree Growers Association offers these suggestions--
-- Try to select a fresh tree by looking for one that is green. The needles should bend and not break and should be hard to pull off of the branches. Shake or bounce the tree on its stump. You should not see an excessive number of green needles fall to the ground. Some drop of older, interior needles is a natural and normal part of a tree’s growth.
-- As soon as the tree is brought home, make a fresh cut, removing at a “maximum of one inch” of the trunk and place the tree in a sturdy water-holding stand. If you have a pin stand and the retailer has drilled your tree and you cut off more than an inch, the hole will not be big enough and the stand won’t work.
-- The level of plain water in the tree stand, with a capacity of at least one gallon, should be kept above the base of the tree. The water level should be checked daily.
-- Trees should be kept away from fireplaces, heaters, and other sources of heat.
Visit the Keystone 10 Million Trees Partnership to learn how you can help clean water grow on trees.
For more on Chesapeake Bay-related issues in Pennsylvania, visit the Chesapeake Bay Foundation-PA webpage. Click Here to sign up for Pennsylvania updates (bottom of left column). Click Here to support their work.
CBF has over 275,000 members in Bay Watershed.
How Clean Is Your Stream?
The draft 2024 report has an interactive report viewer that allows you to zoom in to your own address to see if the streams near you are impaired and why.
Click Here to check out your streams. Click Here for a tutorial on using the viewer.
Related Article - Holiday:
-- PennEnvironment Releases New Guide To Buying Refurbished Electronics During Holiday Season [PaEN]
Related Articles:
-- Guest Essay: Turning The Tide On The Chesapeake Bay - Giving Thanks For Pennsylvania's Progress And A New Opportunity For Leadership - By Marel King, PA Director, Chesapeake Bay Commission; Julia Krall, PA Executive Director, Chesapeake Bay Foundation; Kristin Reilly, Choose Clean Water Coalition; and Chris Hoffman, Pennsylvania Farm Bureau [PaEN]
-- Penn State’s Center For Dirt & Gravel Road Studies Spearheads New Design Standards For Stream Crossings [PaEN]
-- Capital Resource, Conservation & Development Area Council Hosts Dec. 11 Pasture Walk In Franklin County [PaEN]
-- Pennsylvania Forest Seminar Webinar Dec. 10 - Invasive Toolkit For Landowners [PaEN]
-- Penn State Extension Dec. 12 Webinar - Cost-Benefit of Voluntary Carbon Projects: Online Tool Demo [PaEN]
-- Pennsylvania Forest Seminar Webinar Jan. 14 - Brook Trout In Our Native Waters [PaEN]
-- Brodhead Watershed Association Protecting Clean Water Together: Who's In Charge Of Your Water? [PaEN]
-- Reforest Our Future Patch Project Creates Mini-Forests In Beaver County Community [PaEN]
NewsClips:
-- Chesapeake Bay Journal Forum: Science Is Important, But People Must Be At The Center Of Chesapeake Bay Cleanup Effort - By Lawrence Sanford, Chair Bay Program Scientific & Technical Advisory Committee
-- Vista.Today: Community Volunteers Lead Environmental Research Across Delaware River Basin
-- Penn State: American Soil Losing More Crop Nutrients Due To Heavier Rainstorms, Study Shows
-- Arboretum At Penn State To Plant ‘Moon Tree’ In Children's Garden
[Posted: November 26, 2024] PA Environment Digest
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