But, it occurred to me this week, during the Christmas season I practice a different form of garden ornamentation, although to no less excess. You can essentially forget about "stewardship of the planet" during Christmas at my house.
The other members of my household, Mrs. ProfessorRoush, the absent son, and my diminutive clone of my mother, all are in agreement that the annual Christmas tree in our house must be "live," or rather, one of those cut-off but once-living classic Christmas trees. In fact, it must be a Frazier fir, preferred by all for the stiffness of the branches and the longevity of the needles. I've personally been tempted to obtain the orderliness and ease of an artificial tree, but I've been overruled for a number of years now. And, due to my confusion caused by the various advocates for potted living trees or for the plight of poor Christmas Tree farmers and the distractive screaming of the WEE (Wild-Eyed Environmentalists) who bemoan the fossil fuel consumption represented by an artificial tree, I'm not sure what is the ecologically correct solution anyway. So every year, I'm hauling in another dying tree to hope that it doesn't become a fire hazard before I can dump it into a pond (for fish shelter) after New Year's Day. They start at my favorite, the Kansas Wheat Ornament pictured at the very top right of this blog, handmade by my daughter in nursery school. This one, so special to me, represents Kansas and my former toddling daughter all at one time. There are a number of other homemade ornaments as well like the one pictured to the right, this particular one made by ProfessorRoush himself in a ceramics store to which he was dragged against his better judgement at the time.
Alas, it may be a dying tree that provides holiday cheer in the ProfessorRoush home, but it is given the best prettying up we can give it, with each bauble and bangle cherished all. Merry Christmas to all!
I too have the same stories to tell, many different ornaments which are special in their own ways. thank you for sharing Prof. Have a mighty Christmas. Greggo.
ReplyDeleteChristmas tree is a beautiful tree and it is the best option to get the wonderful look to your garden therefore during christmas garden look so beautiful
ReplyDeleteAh, I love your tree! We, too, prefer a (dead) live tree and decorate in much the same way: I've the ornaments from when the kids were small, a couple my grandmother made, various ones we've been given or we've picked up over the years.... There are so many wonderful memories!
ReplyDeleteWe've opted not to put a tree up this year, so getting to "steal" a few looks at your's is a particularly nice present. Thanks for sharing!