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How To Recycle Christmas Trees

Make Most Of Your Tree By Recycling It In Your Back Yard

JanFeb Organic Gardening Mag CoverTips From Organic Gardening Magazine

You can recycle your Christmas tree and keep it from going to overflowing landfills. Here's how:

Make mulch Cut off the boughs and place them on the ground like a blanket to protect plants that are susceptible to windburn, plants that are marginally hardy in your area, and plants that might come up early and be nipped by a late spring frost, such as fall-planted pansies or early emerging perennials. (Keep reading for ideas on what to do with the trunk.)

Give it to the birds Move the tree in its stand outdoors for the winter, where it can provide food and shelter for wild birds. Even better, put the tree near a bird feeder or hang bird treats from the tree -- like bags of suet (animal fat you can get at most grocery stores) or a small piece of wood or thick cardboard smeared with a mix of bird seed and peanut butter -- and it will not only attract birds but feed them, too.

Compost or chip it Call your municipality's administrative office to find out if your town has a special day for picking up Christmas trees or a place where you can take them after the holidays where they will be ground into wood chips and composted. Often you can go to the municipal compost site in the spring and get free compost and wood chip mulch for your garden. Of course, you probably won't recognize the chips/compost from your tree, but you can feel good knowing that it's helping other gardeners have healthier landscapes and you have kept perfectly good organic matter from clogging a landfill.

Turn it into a trellis Move the tree to a corner of your yard and in the spring set it up in your garden as a trellis for peas or beans.

It's about looking out on the landscape you have always wanted, making it as lovely as you've always dreamed it could be, and as safe and healthy as your family deserves.

JanFeb Organic Gardening Mag CoverSuscribe to Organic Gardening Magazine

Copyright 2003 Organic Gardening Magazine. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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