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How Much Are Real Christmas Trees?
Feel like getting a real, live Christmas tree this holiday season? You're not alone. Here's what to expect. The post How Much ...
Well, with a few real Christmas tree care tips under your belt, your tree could last longer than you think – and that way, you'll reap all the benefits of a real Christmas tree throughout the ...
One major downside to real trees: If you don't know where the tree was grown, it might have been cut down and transported a long distance, which generates emissions.
The Real Christmas Tree Board makes it easy to find a retailer in your area, whether you want to buy from a choose-and-cut tree farm, a garden center, a home improvement store or a general retailer.
Real trees require constant watering and a trip to the nearest Christmas tree farm each holiday season, but they produce oxygen and can be recycled into mulch. JenkoAtaman – stock.adobe.com ...
Of course, O'Connor's organization represents Christmas tree farmers. Here's what studies and environmentalists say. The studies. The most recent U.S. analysis of the issue is from 2018, when a ...
According to the Nature Conservancy, real trees don’t require the carbon emissions it takes to produce and transport artificial ones. Of the 350-500 million trees growing on U.S. tree farms, ...
It's time to discuss one of the perennial debates of the holiday season: Which are more eco-friendly, real trees or their fake counterparts? If you ask Tim O'Connor, executive director of the ...
In a survey of Christmas tree buyers, nearly a quarter — 23% — said they are planning to buy a real Christmas tree for the first time this year.
Lee Culpepper, 82, said she has always had a real Christmas tree — and always will. She picked out a nice 9-footer Wednesday at Tradition Trees in Chamblee.
According to the survey, 24% planned to buy a real Christmas tree while 46% were opting for an artificial one.
An environmentalist's take. Several environmental groups have waded into the debate, and for many of them, real trees are the winner. "For me, it's not just carbon," said Hoover.