Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Natural Christmas Tree Decorations

“What a horrifyingly garish sight,” I said to my friend as we surveyed my Christmas tree last year. We had just finished decorating it and my eyes were sending messages to my brain, like, “Hey, this is really tacky.”

Truth is, the décor I had accumulated after years of city dwelling in my sassy twenties looked awfully out of place in my humble Vermont cabin. What I once thought dazzling – glitter-coated icicles, a miniature disco ball, a purple-feathered bird with jeweled eyes, flocks of shiny gold and green balls – now looked as out of place as a pink flamingo at my bird feeder. Even the duck decoy my great uncle carved seemed to give the gaudy fiasco an alarmed stare. Such a tree no longer belonged in my world.

Looking around my cabin – at the milkweed on the window sill, the dried Canada lily stalks by my window, the turkey feather on my bookshelf – I had an idea. Why not lavish my tree with favorite things – things I find along my walks?

After selecting a bunch of woodsy items for my tree last year, I thought I’d share some of my favorites.

Ferns and Pods

There are a variety of dried plants awaiting your picking. Ferns, especially sensitive ferns and ostrich ferns, are particular favorites of mine. Now in their seeded-out glory, pull these ferns out of the ground with as much stalk as you can; this will make them easier to stick in among your trees’ branches.

I like to hollow out a handful of milkweed pods and placed them so they are cupping individual lights on the tree. If you have a tough time aligning a pod to a light, you can use gardeners’ yarn to tie the stalk of the milkweed to a branch to get it right where you want it. Alternatively – if you’ve got some time and a lot of patience – individual pods can be cut from the stalk and glued to individual lights. Exercise common sense: if you’ve got old-fashioned lights that burn hot, this is probably not a good idea.

The dried flowers of goldenrods will add texture to your tree, while a few twigs of beech, with orangey leaves intact, add color.

Clammy ground-cherry seed pods can still be found along some riverbanks this time of year. These Japanese lantern-like pods are now a light brown and transparent, and you can often find a stem with an entire row of lanterns neatly lined up.

I prefer their natural colors, but if you want a little shine, you can spray-paint these plants gold or silver.

Vines

Now I love strings of popcorn twirling up the tree as much as the next gal, but there are wild vines that can make interesting substitutes. Virgin’s bower and bur cucumber can be found entwined among thickets and plants along woods edges, streambanks, and fencerows.

Virgin’s bower offers fluffy, white seed clusters, while bur cucumber has spiky, oat-colored seed pods.

Untangling these vines from the plants they’re gripping can be tricky. It’s best to gently tug the vine in segments, un-entwining as you go, rather than trying to rip it out in one go. Plan your transport of these delicate vines ahead of time. If you have to hoof it pretty far, bring a large garbage bag in which you can store the vines loosely. If you’re able to drive up to the vines, plan on laying them across your backseat or in the trunk.

Berries

Highbush cranberries are one of my favorite red fruits to spot in the dead of a snow-white winter. These berries, along with winterberry and mountain ash, can be found all winter long, and a few sprigs of them add a nice dose of color to your tree.

If you’re unfortunate enough to see the woods around you tangled in bittersweet, you can at least make temporary good of this invasive by clipping sections of the plant to decorate your tree. While the plant is an aggressive invasive, the berries are pretty. Be sure to throw them in the woodstove or discard them in a plastic trash bag after the holiday so the seeds don’t germinate in your compost pile.

While this décor a la Mother Nature suits my taste, I still can’t resist tradition … and glitter. I will still place colored lights throughout the branches, top my tree with a glittery silver reindeer, and string dried star fruit around and around the boughs. A sparkly owl, a ceramic kitten, and mini-stockings for my cat and dog will all be placed on the tree again this year.

If such natural decorations whet your whistle, make haste: many of these goodies are far more difficult to pluck and pull from the earth once the snow stacks up.

Meghan Oliver is the assistant editor at Northern Woodlands magazine. Photo courtesy US Department of Agriculture. The Outside Story is assigned and edited by Northern Woodlands magazine and sponsored by the Wellborn Ecology Fund of New Hampshire Charitable Foundation: wellborn@nhcf.org.

The essay first appeared on the Adirondack Almanack on Dec. 13, 2012.

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The Adirondack Almanack publishes occasional guest essays from Adirondack residents, visitors, and those with an interest in the Adirondack Park. Submissions should be directed to Almanack editor Melissa Hart at editor@adirondackalmanack.com




3 Responses

  1. Wally Elton says:

    Of course, another option is not to have an indoor tree. Ours is outdoors, alive and growing, yet with lights and visible through the window. Afterall, it happens that highbush cranberries and other wild fruits also are favorites of many critters who live outside all year round.

  2. MLS says:

    Photos of these decorations would be appreciated!

  3. Suji says:

    Sitting on the branches in clumps, reindeer moss makes lovely snow, and can be composted or returned to the woods after Christmas. A living tree is a nice idea, but one’s cut tree can also be put outside and decorated with fruits, nuts and suet for the critters, and composted later. Farmed trees are a renewable resource and tree farmers are struggling to make a living. At our place, if we didn’t cut down any small trees, we’d soon have a jungle.

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