The Columbus Dispatch

Holiday decor at your fingertips with homegrown greenery

- Mike Hogan Guest columnist

I am a holiday decoration junkie. In our home last December, there were no fewer than 11 trees of various sizes, nearly two dozen different nativities from around the world, several holiday plants and many other assorted holiday decoration­s.

I always enjoy looking for new and vintage holiday decoration­s to feed my decoration addiction, but this year the decoration pickings are slim at many stores due to supply-chain disruption­s (which I imagine to somehow have been engineered by the Grinch himself).

The good news is that if you are looking for some new ideas for holiday decoration­s this year, look no further than your own backyard or your local garden center for different types of fresh conifer and evergreen greenery that is sure to brighten up the inside and outside of your home this holiday season.

Decorating the outside and inside of the house with fresh evergreens is one of the oldest winter holiday traditions, having been used in ancient winter festivals. Evergreens were used to represent everlastin­g life and hope for the return of spring. Today, decorating for the holidays with fresh greenery is more popular than ever, with many different plants providing a wide array of foliage with different characteri­stics for holiday decorating.

Types of greenery

Almost any type of evergreen or conifer can be used as holiday greenery. Firs, pines, and cedars are excellent as cut greens, as they dry out slowly and hold their needles best in warm interior temperatur­es. Many species of firs and cedars also provide a wonderfull­y festive scent when used indoors. Hemlock, spruces, and other broadleaf evergreens will last longer when used as outdoor decoration­s as they tend to dry out and drop needles very quickly. Holly branches are very traditiona­l winter holiday decoration­s with branches from female plants prized for their bright red berries.

Gathering greenery

One of the best places to look for holiday greenery is your home landscape. Many of the evergreens and conifers that we use in our home landscapes are excellent sources of greenery for holiday decorating.

Common landscape shrubs such as arborvitae, junipers, boxwood, and cypress make excellent holiday greenery. Avoid using greenery from yews (taxus sp.) as the hard seed inside the red berry is toxic, as is its foliage.

When gathering fresh greenery from trees and shrubs in the home landscape, remember that you are actually pruning these plants when you remove branches so consider carefully which branches to cut and which to leave. Distribute cuts evenly around the plant to maintain its natural shape and density. Be sure to use sharp cutters to remove branches and place cut ends into water until you are ready to use them.

Before bringing the greenery inside, soak them in water overnight for maximum hydration of the stems. Once the greenery has dried, it should be treated with an anti-transpiran­t such as Wiltpruf to help seal in the moisture.

One of the benefits of gathering greenery from your home landscape is that it will be very fresh and will last longer and stay greener when harvested immediatel­y before use.

If you don’t have conifers or evergreens in your home landscape, most local garden centers offer a wide variety of greenery for purchase, including items which we won’t find in our home landscape at this time of year, such as magnolia leaves.

How to use greenery

Fresh-cut greenery from conifers and evergreens can be used to make several different types of holiday decoration­s for the home. Greens can be made into wreaths, swags, and roping to adorn doorways and windows or fashioned into centerpiec­es for tables or bookcases. Fresh cut greens can also be placed into vases with water or used in arrangemen­ts with cut flowers or other natural decoration­s. Simple boughs of greens also provide tasteful backdrops for nativities and other holiday collection­s.

Use caution when incorporat­ing candles or electric lights with fresh greenery as greens can dry out quickly. Never place fresh greenery near heat sources such as heater vents, fireplaces or space heaters. Check greenery every few days to make sure it has not become dried out or brittle. Dry and brittle greenery should be removed and replaced to extend the life of the decoration­s.

No matter which winter holidays are celebrated at your house, greenery from different conifers and evergreens is sure to add to the festivenes­s of the holiday.

Mike Hogan is an associate professor at Ohio State University and an educator at the OSU Extension.

hogan.1@ osu.edu

 ?? BARBARA J. PERENIC/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Fresh-cut greenery can be used to make wreaths, baskets, holiday arrangemen­ts, and other decoration­s.
BARBARA J. PERENIC/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Fresh-cut greenery can be used to make wreaths, baskets, holiday arrangemen­ts, and other decoration­s.
 ?? SANGJIB MIN/NEWPORT NEWS DAILY PRESS ?? Greenery from conifers and evergreens make ideal decoration­s.
SANGJIB MIN/NEWPORT NEWS DAILY PRESS Greenery from conifers and evergreens make ideal decoration­s.
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