This past weekend, my husband and I packed up the baby and
went to the tree nursery to pick out the perfect tree for our Victorian home.
We walked in the semi-heated outdoor tent where we could get the Fraser Fir of
our Christmas dreams. The fragrance kind of hits you in the face when you walk
in those places don’t it? It certainly seemed to impress our 18 month old who
proudly proclaimed “woooow” when he saw the trees.
We found our tree, paid for it, and went home to set it up.
After about 10 minutes of our son being afraid to go near the tree, he then
proceeded to bat at it with his plush baseball bat. Apparently it was not cool
with him that the tree was set up in his toy area. After that fiasco was over
we noticed another pungent smell that hits you in the face.
My husband turned to me and said, “Do you smell a skunk?”
Yep, I did. Why? We tried figuring this out for several minutes and finally
came to the conclusion that it was the tree. When growing in its tree farm, it
had been sprayed. We were sure at this point there was no skunk in the tree. We
checked. So, we waited it out and lit as many good smelling candles we could
find to help us deal with it.
Why would anyone go through something like this to have a
real tree as opposed to getting a fake one? Which one is more environmentally
friendly? We are always talking about saving trees and recycling your paper so
why cut down millions of Christmas trees for this strange tradition every year?
As it turns out, it is still more environmentally friendly
to get a real tree than a fake one. This
article on Earth 911 tells you all about the pros and cons. The main points
are:
·
Artificial trees contain PVC, metals, and some
older ones have lead.
·
They will sit in landfills for centuries without
biodegrading. And, they are not recyclable.
·
More than 85% of the artificial trees sold in
the USA come from China. (Do they celebrate Christmas?) So that is a long way
to travel with a big environmental footprint.
·
“Approximately 33 million real Christmas trees
are sold in North America each year, according to the U.S. EPA. Luckily, about
93 percent of those trees are recycled through more than 4,000 available
recycling programs.” These are the curbside collections mostly.
·
A single real tree absorbs more than a ton of
CO2 throughout its lifetime before being cut. With 350 million trees growing
for Christmas purposes that is a big carbon sink.
·
Did you know each acre of trees produces enough
oxygen for the daily needs of 18 people?
So pungent odors aside, I think the real tree still wins my
vote. In the meantime, I will be working on improving my tree picking skills
‘til next year’s tree is chosen.
Lol! I never thoght about the possibility of animals or stink since we bought our real home from Costco last year, good thing to keep in mind :)
ReplyDeleteChristie - You never know what is in there. The first tree we ever got together, there was a bird nest. No birds of course but it was in there!
ReplyDeleteVery interesting. Your article is so convincing that I can never stop myself from saying anything about it. You are doing a great job, thanks for sharing such a great blog. Miami Flower Design
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