Fresh Christmas trees become big-box staple


Some families still prefer to get their trees the old-fashioned way.

CHICAGO (AP) — As Christmas traditions go, this one’s big.

Every year, the Proeber family traipses through the fields of central Illinois searching for the perfect Christmas tree before breaking out the saw, tying their selection to the roof of their car and hauling it back to their living room.

“It would be a whole day’s worth of celebration, a whole day of entertainment,” said Jan Proeber, a minister from Lexington, Ill. “You smelled Christmas and you tasted Christmas and you felt Christmas.”

But such rituals — cemented for many in the collective American memory thanks to Currier & Ives and Norman Rockwell and, yes, even Chevy Chase — may be fading.

Last year, 16 percent of the nation’s 31.3 million live Christmas trees were cut by the people whose family rooms they’d grace, according to industry data. A larger percentage, roughly one in four, were bought at big-box chains.

The segment’s Christmas tree business has been steadily growing, overtaking sales from cut-it-yourself farms last year while continually overpowering tree-selling venues such as nurseries, retail lots and nonprofit groups, according to the National Christmas Tree Association.

The Home Depot Inc., the nation’s largest retailer of fresh-cut trees, expects to sell about 2 million trees between Thanksgiving and Christmas during a carefully choreographed sales extravaganza.

The production, which began Monday when the company’s stores around the nation started to receive shipments of trees from two dozen farms, is so detailed that the Atlanta-based company knows just where to send tall trees (wealthier suburban communities where homes are more likely to have been designed with cathedral ceilings) and what varieties sell better in certain regions (balsam firs in the northern U.S.; noble firs in the West.)

Close behind Home Depot are household names such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Lowe’s Cos. Inc.

Despite the growth of big business in the Christmas tree market, there are still families hanging on to over-the-river-and-through-the-woods moments.

In the early 1990s, the Huron-Manistee National Forests in northern Michigan sold more than 600 permits each year to people willing to pay a few dollars to get permission to cut their own tree. In the nearly two decades since, families began going elsewhere, caught up in the buy-it-now phenomenon of the nation.

“Christmas trees were cheaper and it was easy for people to go out and buy them,” said Carol Nilsson, public information specialist with the forest. “But there were always the people who wanted the Christmas experience of going out and finding them.”

Last year, 149 people bought the $5 permits that entitled them to a map of the forest and up to three trees. But interest in the program is up this year, and officials expect more people to trudge along the forest’s trails to look for a tree — a trend Nilsson and others attribute to the recession.

“Trees, when you look at them in the wild, they look very different,” Nilsson said. “But to cut it down and drag it back out and put it in your car, it’s unique. And it’s a unique tree when you put it in your house. It’s not pruned and it’s not painted.”

At the Santa Cruz Host Lions Club in California, officers expect their Christmas tree-selling business to be slower than usual when they open shop today in a parking lot. Last year, the group wound up mulching 200 unsold trees and this year cut orders to 800, down from the 1,200 to 1,400 trees it typically stocks. The club, which has sold trees for more than four decades, also halved its order for the tallest trees.