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- From: snyder@henry.ece.cmu.edu (John Snyder)
- Subject: Re: Christmas tree alternative?
- Message-ID: <1992Nov18.205159.2381@fs7.ece.cmu.edu>
- Sender: news@fs7.ece.cmu.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Physics Department, Carnegie Mellon University
- References: <1992Nov17.092118.5813@athena.cs.uga.edu> <1eb20eINN4oi@cat.cis.Brown.EDU>
- Date: Wed, 18 Nov 1992 20:51:59 GMT
- Lines: 71
-
- In article <1eb20eINN4oi@cat.cis.Brown.EDU> GE777009@brownvm.brown.edu (Jenna Cole-Steele) writes:
- >Get a live tree, balled and bagged, and plant it somewhere.
- >That's what our family has done for the years between me
- >being born (1966) and 1990. Now, my mother has an artificial
- >tree, my father has an artificial tree, and my sister has
- >one as well.
- >
- >i think its a huge waste to cut down trees just to use as
- >christmas trees, regardless of the "poor tree" argument,
- >how about the " poor earth" argument?
- >
- >This year, my new husband and i will start a new tradition of
- >getting a balled and bagged tree, and donating it to Keep
- >Providence Beautiful
- >
- >Most balled and bagged trees are cheaper than quality cut trees,
- >at least if you know where to go.
- >
- >Good luck.
- >
- >Jenna Cole-Steele
- >Avant Gardens
- >Providence, RI 02916
-
-
- Does anyone know where the bulk of Christman trees come from? Correct me
- if I'm wrong, but I don't believe that they are cut in the wild from
- clear-cut virgin forests or anything like that. (They would be unlikely
- to grow in a particularly pleasing shape.) I think that a large number
- (perhaps essentially all?) of them are *FARMED*. Planted in regular straight
- rows in a field like other crops. And how do so many of them have that dense,
- conical shape that so many people like? I believe that they are tended and
- clipped like that. My family used to get our trees at a place that grew them
- for cut-it-yourself. Later my uncle grew them on ground at my grandfather's
- farm. They make a good cash crop for farmers. (Particularly if you live
- within driving distance of a large city, where they fetch higher prices.)
- My brother is considering buying a small farm in the country, and I recommended
- that he look into growing Christmas trees, as a small way of helping to
- foot the bill.
-
- For those who think using a cut live tree for decoration is somehow unethical,
- I ask the following questions:
-
- 1) Do you wrap your gifts in wrapping paper? Is that paper used once for
- Christmas, then thrown away? Trees are cut for paper (and *forest* trees,
- I believe).
- 2) Do you use paper Christmas decorations? (trees again)
- 3) Do you bring your food and gifts home in brown paper bags? (Those
- bags are made from virgin long-fiber pulp, and, I believe can not be
- made strong enough from recycled paper.) Do you reuse and recycle those bags?
- 4) Do you worry about the poor wheat plants that died to produce your
- Christmas cookies or dough ornaments?
- 5) Do you worry about the poor vegetables that died to make your Christmas
- feast? (celery, herbs, carrots, potatoes, yams, wild mushrooms, etc. etc. ...)
- 6) Do you decorate with cut flowers?
-
-
- I think that the greatest waste regarding Christmas trees is that when people
- are finished with them, they end-up in landfills, when they could be used
- for so many other purposes. A nature center near where I live has a chipping
- program, where they are turned into mulch. My family used to use them as
- wild bird shelter near bird feeders. When I was young, we even made a great
- roof for a lean-to that we built in the woods.
-
- If you are trying to save forests, there are surely more effective ways to
- do it than boycotting Christmas trees (which, it seems to me is only a
- little more effective than boycotting broccoli).
-
- John
- snyder@henry.ece.cmu.edu
-
-