CAHNRS and WSU Extension

Marketing and News Services

December 10, 2003      FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Denny Fleenor - 206/972-8590 (office)
206/632-4399 (Home)

A Better Christmas Tree and Tree Safety Tips

PUYALLUP, Wash. -- What makes an ideal Christmas tree?

Most of us look for things like shape, fullness and good color, but Washington State University plant pathologist Gary Chastagner has some additional criteria.

"For me, the ideal Christmas tree is one that's relatively easy to grow in this region, has natural resistance to disease and pests, and has high moisture and needle retention once it's cut," Chastagner said. "The big thing is moisture retention, not just for appearances but because that means a more fire resistant tree."

From the WSU Puyallup Research and Extension Center Chastagner is leading an international search for superior Christmas trees, working with collaborators in three Scandinavian countries, two Canadian provinces and several states.

Some of the collaborating organizations clip branches from trees in their regions that exhibit the preferred traits and overnight ship them to Chastagner's Puyallup lab. He hangs them in a controlled environment and observes how well each holds its needles and retains moisture. Branch samples from the same trees are being tested repeatedly over a three-year period.

Because of restrictions on shipping branches from Europe,

Chastagner has traveled to Denmark and other countries to conduct his research.

Trees with the appropriate traits are elusive. For example, recent samples from 94 Canaan fir trees found only 3 trees that did not shed any needles, according to Chastagner.

Once trees with the desirable characteristics are identified, clippings from them can be grafted to trees in a seed orchard. The resulting trees become "mother" trees, providing seeds carrying the desirable traits for use by the more than 1,000 Christmas tree growers in the Pacific Northwest.

"We're simply taking the natural good traits in these trees and perpetuating them," Chastagner said. "That gives our Northwest tree growers a competitive advantage."

According to the Pacific Northwest Christmas Tree Association, 11.3 million Christmas trees are being harvested in Washington and Oregon for this holiday season with an estimated value of $211 million.

Ninety percent of Northwest-grown trees are sold out-of-state. Most of them being shipped to California. But the Association points out that Northwest Christmas trees also are popular in Japan, China, Hong Kong, the Philippines, Mexico, Guam and Puerto Rico, not to mention Hawaii and Alaska.

Once you've found your ideal Christmas tree, Chastagner has some tips to make sure it not only looks good through the holidays but also doesn't dry out and become a fire hazard.

 

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Source Contact:
Gary Chastagner 253-445-4528

 

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