Truro News

Parrsboro driver delivers special tree

- BY FRAM DINSHAW

Dave Macfarlane has quite a fan base in Boston.

For the sixth year in a row he is driving the city’s Christmas tree from Nova Scotia to Boston, along highways often lined with cheering bystanders and motorists honking their horns in support.

“The closer we get to Massachuse­tts the more people know it’s their tree coming to Boston, so there’s a lot of waving, a lot of people pulling over and taking pictures,” said Macfarlane, who hails from Parrsboro. “Going into Boston the first time, going into the downtown and city common, there was a crowd of people waiting for the tree.”

Since 1971, the tree has been given as a thank-you to Boston for sending medical personnel and supplies to Nova Scotia when nearly 2,000 people were killed and hundreds more were left injured and homeless by the Halifax Explosion in early December 1917.

For Macfarlane, a veteran truck driver of 20 years who works as a snow plow operator on the Cobequid Pass, most of the journey is fairly easy, even loading the tree onto the truck with a crane. The trickiest part is right at the end, navigating the winding streets of Boston that lead to the Common – the city’s main park where the tree is displayed.

Taking Boston’s tree over the American border is fairly easy, as the paperwork is filed in advance and the tree itself is inspected for pests, preventing the transport of unwanted bugs into the United States. The tree is prepared by a team from Nova Scotia’s Department of Lands and Forestry.

Before leaving for the U.S., Mac- Farlane took the tree on a minitour of Nova Scotia.

Donated by Ross Mckellar and Teresa Simpson of Oxford, the tree was cut the morning of Nov. 15 and made an appearance in Truro later that same day. Its next stop was the Chronicle Herald Holiday Parade of Lights on Nov. 17.

After a stop in Amherst Sunday, Macfarlane set out to drive his cargo along the highways of New Brunswick, Maine and through New Hampshire and into Massachuse­tts.

Once it arrives at the Boston Common, the tree will be lit up in the presence of Nova Scotian town criers and members of the RCMP. The Boston Common holiday tree lighting is Thursday, Nov. 29.

“It makes me feel proud to be a Canadian and a Nova Scotian and that we still send a tree in thanks for what Boston did for us in our time of need,” said Macfarlane.

 ?? FRAM DINSHAW/ TRURO NEWS ?? Dave Macfarlane has driven the Christmas tree from Nova Scotia to Boston for six straight years. He drove the flatbed truck carrying the tree to Truro’s Rath Eastlink Community Centre on Nov. 15, where local families and schoolchil­dren came to check it out. From left, Lynn Chase and her granddaugh­ter Nora Chase and Dave Macfarlane. Young school children were also quite interested in the huge tree.
FRAM DINSHAW/ TRURO NEWS Dave Macfarlane has driven the Christmas tree from Nova Scotia to Boston for six straight years. He drove the flatbed truck carrying the tree to Truro’s Rath Eastlink Community Centre on Nov. 15, where local families and schoolchil­dren came to check it out. From left, Lynn Chase and her granddaugh­ter Nora Chase and Dave Macfarlane. Young school children were also quite interested in the huge tree.
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