For
folks who worry about carbon as a pollutant, disposed of correctly
(such as using it for structure in the bottom of our large farm pond),
the tree is a net gain for the environment in many ways. You are
actually sequestering carbon, contributing to a habitat for animals in
the form of the tree farm (instead of it being corn or some such), and
helping the local economy.
If
you heat your home with wood, burning it will be a net gain as well
since there will be less pollutants than heating via coal which is
probably where your electric comes from. Even if not, there are very
few good technologies producing electricity for large utilities - the
more localised the better.
If
you have no other use for the wood, burying it would be the next best
option since it will eventually break down into soil, but even sending
it to a landfill would sequester the carbon in the trunk and branches,
and eventually return it to the soil instead of the atmosphere. -Chad
And now for the part from Danelle-
Real tree doesn't just mean the tree part to us. It means everything, from top down. I used to go nuts with our 10 foot tall artificial tree, Nutcracker theme, 200 glass balls in 9 different colours, 10 strands of lights, everything placed just so......and then I had children. Ha.
At first I tried to compromise- the 200 glass balls went to storage and were replaced with plastic balls. That worked mostly, but 1 year in storage and they all started to smell like urine. Ew. So out those went. Then went the fake garlands and the lights burned out.
In 2009 we moved to the farm. Our first Christmas here I NEEDED a real tree. We had lived on the farm almost one year and, magically, living here cured my 30 year old chronic sinus infection that flared especially at the holidays and would turn into bronchitis too. So, maybe a real tree would no longer kill me slowly? Maybe?
Local tree farm, for the win!
I survived. Not even a sniffle. By then we had 3 house/farm cats and a just walking 18 month old. Yikes. So no glass balls still. So many broken things. I replaced the lights with just 2 strands of LED lights. Lily and Holly started making ornaments for the tree. This has turned into something extraordinary. Now, every ornament on our tree is heirloom, a gift, or handmade by my children or someone we know. I love it like I never thought I would. Handmade doesn't always mean pipe cleaners and goggle eyes either. Look at what my 9 year old Lily made this year!
Here is our 2013 tree: From plastic balls to jingle bells and evergreens, the magic of the holiday is transforming more than what is on our tree. Our values are changing as well.
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A blog about farming, unschooling, feminism, 22q deletion syndrome, cooking real food, homesteading, permaculture, and motherhood.