Bangkok Post

Christmas tree farms disappear in Indiana

- JULIE BOSMAN

Since 2012, hundreds of Christmas tree farms across the United States have closed. The writer drove to Indiana, where the problem is especially pronounced, to ask farmers what’s going wrong.

A lot, it seems.

Many tree farmers are growing older and choosing to retire. In Indiana, more than 40% of Christmas tree farms have disappeare­d since 2002. The farmers who remain told the writer they’re a misunderst­ood bunch.

“It sounds cushy,” said Carrie Cusick, a 40-year-old farmer in Wanatah. “Oh, you only have Christmas trees? But it’s hard work.”

At her tranquil farm, needles from Frasier firs crunched underfoot and filled the air with a woody scent. Business has boomed this year, partly because two nearby farms shut down.

Trees alone don’t seem to be enough anymore.

“You’ve got to have Santa Claus, you’ve got to have hot chocolate, you’ve got to have a hayride,” said Rick Robbins, who owns Dreamland Christmas Tree Farm in Williamspo­rt.

But Robbins, who has been in the business for 39 years, is a purist. “I tell people: I’m a tree farmer. I don’t want to entertain you.’’

The job doesn’t appeal to everybody. Patience is essential. It usually takes at least six years before the trees that farmers plant each spring are tall enough to sell. And not all of them are pretty enough to end up in a living room.

Misshapen or spindly trees are chopped up and turned into wreaths or door swags.

Summer means time to trim. Tree farmers use sharp, long knives, trimming each tree with precise, upward sweeps of the blade. They spend entire days out in the fields, which have neat rows of trees carefully marked by the year they will eventually be sold. It is a task suited for solitary perfection­ists.

“My husband does all the trimming himself,” said Kathy Wendt, an owner of Lost Forty Tree Farm in Greenfield.

Alternatin­g droughts and floods in recent years have made business difficult. This year, the Wendts had so few trees to sell that they opened for a single weekend.

Plenty of people prize the ease of an artificial tree. But farmers said they saw a lot of younger customers, especially millennial­s, who prefer the real thing to its plastic counterpar­t.

Sheets Christmas Tree Farm, in Osgood, proudly supplied the White House Christmas tree in 1968.

“This season will be its last,’’ said Kebe Sheets, the owner.

The cost of equipment and labour keeps going up. The farm will stay open, but the trees will be replaced by other crops.

“I was born into this,” Sheets said. “It’s just time to bow out. It’s time to do something different.”

 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Christmas trees at Lost Forty Tree Farm in Greenfield, Indiana.
THE NEW YORK TIMES Christmas trees at Lost Forty Tree Farm in Greenfield, Indiana.

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