Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

O Christmas tree, how pricy are thee?

- By Ronald D. White Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — On an uncharacte­ristically crisp December night in Los Angeles, seasonal music mixed with a piney fragrance as mechanic Jose Rodriguez got a lesson in economics to explain why his Christmas tree was scrawnier and costlier than last year.

Tree seller George Lopez said the noble fir that Rodriguez was considerin­g might not have even made it onto his lot last year. But Christmas trees are in short supply, Lopez said, so the grower harvested the lessthan-ideal specimen rather than leave it for another season to fill out a few gaps.

“What am I going to do, not buy a tree?” said Rodriguez, who eventually counted out $125 for a fir that Lopez figured would have cost about $100 last year.

“Once the decoration­s are on, it should be OK.”

For the second year in a row, American consumers are paying more for their Christmas trees, and the selection might not be as lush.

“It’s a tight supply and demand balance this year,” said Doug Hundley, spokesman for the National Christmas Tree Associatio­n, which projects that trees across the country are costing 5 percent to 10 percent more than last year.

A tree grower for 35 years, Hundley these days handles media questions for the trade group and doesn’t want anyone talking about shortages lest consumers get the wrong message and buy the plastic and metal variety instead.

“We believe everyone who wants a natural Christmas tree will be able to find one,” he said.

Hundley and other experts say the supply squeeze grew out of the Great Recession as well as agricultur­al shifts toward more lucrative crops and other land uses, which could contribute to higher prices in the future.

Growers in Oregon and North Carolina, which supply most of the nation’s Christmas trees, were betting on an increase in demand shortly before the recession hit in 2007. Sales tanked, causing a severe oversupply of trees. That resulted in sharply lower tree plantings, said Chal Landgren, a professor at Oregon State University Extension Service and a Christmas tree specialist.

“The recession certainly had something to do with it, but the bigger problem was that we also overplante­d by about 2 or 3 million trees” before the downturn, Landgren said.

“There wasn’t any market for those trees,” he said. “People left the industry, and we’ve shrunk.”

Between 2010 and 2015, the number of acres growing Christmas trees in Oregon fell to 41,223 from 57,250, federal data show.

Some growers planted other crops that were more profitable, and some faced a generation­al change, Hundley said.

“A lot of the growers started out in the 1950s. They are all aged, out and their children sometimes aren’t as interested in carrying on,” he said.

Tougher conditions have winnowed trees, too.

“In an average year, about 10 percent of the seedlings die,” Landgren said. “In these last two years, growers have experience­d 50 percent, 60 percent and even 70 percent losses on noble firs.”

Another factor: With vast distances to cover getting trees from the growers to market, higher fuel prices are contributi­ng to higher costs.

Diesel, the fuel that powers longhaul trucks, is averaging more than $2.80 a gallon nationwide, up more than 40 cents from a year earlier, according to AAA. In California, diesel is averaging more than $3.55 a gallon, up about 70 cents from a year earlier.

 ?? GENARO MOLINA/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? “I had to look at 100 trees before I could find 10 that I wanted,” says George Lopez, a tree seller in Venice, Calif..
GENARO MOLINA/LOS ANGELES TIMES “I had to look at 100 trees before I could find 10 that I wanted,” says George Lopez, a tree seller in Venice, Calif..

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