survival farm

Monday, January 6, 2020

What to do with your Christmas tree | Alys Fowler

The needles make excellent ericaceous compost and the branches can be used for pea or bean supports

Is your Christmas tree looking a little sad? One might imagine it is by now, for the ghost has truly flown, and left a flurry of needles on your floor. Still, let us not waste this moment to honour the tree’s life with a good bit of recycling.

If I am honest, I don’t have a tree to recycle because I am not a fan of the Christmas tree tradition. So mostly I have to steal other people’s trees. I go around collecting up the corpses left out with the bins (clearly not the ones destined for the council recycling scheme) and take them back to my allotment.

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* This article was originally published here

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