Real Christmas trees
Author
Discussion

usn90

Original Poster:

1,862 posts

89 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Want to have a real tree this year, I m not familiar with the different types, we ve bought a stand capable of holding water, which would you recommend for the nice smell and not
Dropping needles as much?

Would like to buy one within the next 2 weeks so longevity is a factor too

trickywoo

13,319 posts

249 months

Saturday
quotequote all
It’s quite difficult to buy a needle dropping tree in the Uk these days.

Nordman trees are the norm and are resistant to dropping. The needles tend to be bigger than the og trees we used to get in the Uk. They smell ok.

Cut an inch off the stem and put in water for the best longevity but unless your house is really hot they will last the Christmas period ok without any special treatment.

I’m waiting to see the price this year. Wonder if we’ll top £60 for a standard height tree.

PushedDover

6,809 posts

72 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Too Early !!




(but i would vere towards independent nurseries / outlets - and you'll pay more, but benefit)


usn90

Original Poster:

1,862 posts

89 months

Saturday
quotequote all
trickywoo said:
It s quite difficult to buy a needle dropping tree in the Uk these days.

Nordman trees are the norm and are resistant to dropping. The needles tend to be bigger than the og trees we used to get in the Uk. They smell ok.

Cut an inch off the stem and put in water for the best longevity but unless your house is really hot they will last the Christmas period ok without any special treatment.

I m waiting to see the price this year. Wonder if we ll top £60 for a standard height tree.
In b&q a 7ft was £60, pretty sure that was a nordman

Not sure that b&q would be the best place to buy however


Edited by usn90 on Saturday 15th November 20:51

QuickQuack

2,586 posts

120 months

Saturday
quotequote all
We get a frazer fir which is great at holding its needles. We have quite tall ceilings and they are quite narrow trees, so a 13' tree looks great . We usually get it at the beginning of December for logistical reasons and it comes down in January. As long as it's watered daily, it stays fresh and lives through the entire season. The key is getting them as fresh as possible. We get ours from a Christmas tree farm not far from here, but I'm sure there others up and down the country. Ours is cut on the day it's delivered, it's put up the same day and it's not without water for an extended period. You should also cut a few cm from the bottom of the trunk before putting the tree up and watering it, just like you should with flowers.

If you're in Northamptonshire/South Leicestershire, we get ours from Welford Christmas Tree Farm:

https://welfordchristmastreefarm.co.uk/

15 years ago, they were just operating out of a shed, but have been very succesful and have really expanded over the last few years. Fantastic local business. This year, it will be our 16th consecutive Christmas tree from them.

usn90

Original Poster:

1,862 posts

89 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Thanks

Looked up tree farms nearby and the ivy cottage wilmslow
Is recommended.

The Three D Mucketeer

6,838 posts

246 months

Yesterday (09:50)
quotequote all
I buy the 1st week in December and leave it outside for a week or two ... They probably fell them in November in any case, so you get a better choice being a bit early.

Chrisgr31

14,165 posts

274 months

Yesterday (10:24)
quotequote all
Buy your tree from a chain store or many garden centres and the chances are it was cut down weeks ago, hasn’t been stored in water etc so will not have a long life.

Buy it direct from a tree farm and you may get to cut it down or dig it up yourself! It’s likely to be a lot fresher

Chrisgr31

14,165 posts

274 months

Yesterday (10:26)
quotequote all
Buy your tree from a chain store or many garden centres and the chances are it was cut down weeks ago, hasn’t been stored in water etc so will not have a long life.

Buy it direct from a tree farm and you may get to cut it down or dig it up yourself. Even if not it’s likely to be fresher

hmg

763 posts

138 months

Yesterday (10:38)
quotequote all
I was so glad when the kids grew up and I didn’t have to do that annual dad thing and go traipsing round every tree seller within a 10 mile radius in the vain attempt of trying to find that ‘perfect tree’ and be relieved of £70 for the privilege…then another £10 for the local scout group to take it away.

Bought a very high quality fake tree a few years ago..which paid for itself within a few years…it fits our spot perfectly and funnily enough I never have to saw off the bottom or hack off the top or that annoying sticky out branch..

Real tree always looked great out in the field but the reality was always a PIA and it’s always your fault when you get it back home and the missus says ‘what in earth did you choose that one for? ‘ ggrrr!

Rant over… Ba Humbug biggrin


21TonyK

12,651 posts

228 months

Yesterday (10:45)
quotequote all
A freshly cut tree kept in water and away from heat lasts for ages and doesnt drop (much!)

16 years of picking and cutting a tree with the kids, ignoring the type, same results every year.

C Lee Farquar

4,123 posts

235 months

Yesterday (12:57)
quotequote all
I have quite a few 6' plus trees, North Oxon, should anyone be looking for a larger one. Still growing.

DonkeyApple

65,034 posts

188 months

usn90 said:
Want to have a real tree this year, I m not familiar with the different types, we ve bought a stand capable of holding water, which would you recommend for the nice smell and not
Dropping needles as much?

Would like to buy one within the next 2 weeks so longevity is a factor too
Should be absolutely fine. The key will just be picking the right place to buy from.

I'd swerve supermarkets and random locations staffed by people with missing teeth. Pick an established business that's been selling trees for years and has a reputation to protect when they allow in the tree selling operators. Pretentious garden centres and arboretums are pretty good places to start.

Then as others have said, cut some of the trunk off and then keep in water and away from heat. The one we put in the hall always lasts longest and I'm sure it's because the hall isn't heated.

usn90

Original Poster:

1,862 posts

89 months

We went to a local recommended tree farm yesterday and chose a tree still in the ground, chose to collect at the beginning of December where it will be cut on the day.

7 foot Fraser fir just over £60 which was actually a small amount cheaper than a pre cut at B&Q, an added bonus was that it was quite a nice niche with the kids choosing one, could make quite a nice yearly tradition.

JimM169

747 posts

141 months

Surely half the fun of a Christmas tree is still getting the needles stuck in your foot 6 mths after it came down!! smile
Loved a real tree as a kid but the non drop varieties these days just don't have the right look or smell so we've caved and have an artificial

Sorry OP as that is obviously of no use to you!!




Wildfire

9,900 posts

271 months

We have been getting ours from B&Q for years now and they have always lasted a good 6 weeks with one of the Krinner stands. The one year we went to a posh nursery we got a Nordman and I was allergic to it and by Christmas day it was looking like Skeletor in drag.

Cyder

7,172 posts

239 months

QuickQuack said:
We get a frazer fir which is great at holding its needles. We have quite tall ceilings and they are quite narrow trees, so a 13' tree looks great . We usually get it at the beginning of December for logistical reasons and it comes down in January. As long as it's watered daily, it stays fresh and lives through the entire season. The key is getting them as fresh as possible. We get ours from a Christmas tree farm not far from here, but I'm sure there others up and down the country. Ours is cut on the day it's delivered, it's put up the same day and it's not without water for an extended period. You should also cut a few cm from the bottom of the trunk before putting the tree up and watering it, just like you should with flowers.

If you're in Northamptonshire/South Leicestershire, we get ours from Welford Christmas Tree Farm:

https://welfordchristmastreefarm.co.uk/

15 years ago, they were just operating out of a shed, but have been very succesful and have really expanded over the last few years. Fantastic local business. This year, it will be our 16th consecutive Christmas tree from them.
I love Welford Christmas Tree farm it's a fabulous place to take the kids and have a mooch around for an hour or two and a hot chocolate, but the real trees aren't half getting sodding expensive.

Harpoon

2,304 posts

233 months

We've normally got a tree from the local garden centre and they have lasted well.

Last year I'd seen a sign for a Christmas tree farm driving into work, so we went there. You walk up the hill, pick a tree and then find a bloke with a chainsaw to cut it down. They charged us for a 6ft tree (I forget the exact price but it was a good bit cheaper than the garden centre) but I think we ended up with a 8ft tree. I had to get a step-ladder to decorate the top of it!

Skodillac

8,386 posts

49 months

Serbian Spruce delivers the best balance of VFM and non-droppingness IMHO. I get one from the Christmas Tree Barn at Christmas Common every year. Even got to stand behind a most miserable looking Philip Schofield in the queue to get mine wrapped in that netting stuff a couple of years ago. I think our 7ft tree was £55 last year, IIRC.

https://thetreebarn.co.uk/tree-varieties

UTH

11,099 posts

197 months

This has got me wanting to cut our own tree, issue is the only place near me is 35 mins drive away and not sure we can do that with half a tree sticking out the back of the car......