Tag: Tree

No Ordinary Tree {Tour of Trees}

By Helen Lampkin

Life doesn’t have to be ordinary” has long been my life mantra – and that has come to include our family Christmas tree!

 Family Christmas Tree

Years ago (c. 1970’s), my father-in-law (a not so ordinary kind of guy that we loved to the moon and back) always purchased “live“ trees for the Christmas holiday.  The day after Christmas the tree would be planted along the edge of his pond, all of which are still there today.

The holiday came when my husband and I decided we wanted to keep the tradition his dad started alive and the tree too! 

First we bought only traditional looking Christmas trees: noble fir, Fat Albert spruce, and once a white pine.

White Pine Planting

But my son and son-in-law made me promise to not do white pine again because it turned out to be a “grinch” to plant!  Let’s just say we all needed a cup of eggnog after that incident.

Our home has several trees that we have planted from Christmases past.  The last three years we went out on a limb and chose a Blue Atlas Cedar.  If you’re not familiar with this variety – trust me – it’s definitely not your ordinary Christmas tree! 

IMG_7377

 

Fat Albert Spruce

Blue Atlas Cedar 

A little like “Whoville” of Dr. Seuss fame, the Blue Atlas when dressed in holiday finery brings a delightful smile to all.  Its slender and winsome nature brings some challenges in decorating, but if you’re an adventurous soul, you’re up for the challenge! 

Bringing in the tree can be daunting, so enlist helpers!

Bringing in the Tree

Before Dressing the Tree

Dressed Tree

 

A few tips I’ve learned along the way: 

  • Plan to have the live tree inside your home no longer than three weeks.  (make Dec. 26th your planting date-don’t forget to water the tree well when planting)
  • Dig the planting hole before Christmas!
  • Live trees come in a large buckets or root ball.  Place a waterproof pad under to protect your flooring.
  • Water smaller amounts every 3-4 days the entire time it is in your house.
  • There is always a risk that the tree will go into shock once planted.  Don’t assume it’s a goner.  I’ve had more than one lose every single needle, only to have them all reappear come Spring.

The trees are now starting to become like members in the family.  You know what I mean, some short, some tall, some a littler fuller than others.  Some a little prickly, some soft and flexible. But we love each of them for all their unique qualities!

Last year’s tree had so much personality in his shape we named him “the giving tree” because of his long willowy arms that seemed to want to reach out and give us a welcoming hug!

Giving Tree

 

I still see that in him when I see him in his special place in our yard.

Giving Tree in Fall

 

Whether it be inspiration from my father in law, Dr. Seuss, or the love for family, I encourage you to step out of the ordinary, do something different, embrace going green, create new family traditions, and start planting beautiful memories along the way!

 

From my table to yours,
helen

Helen's headshotHelen Lampkin, woman of faith, devoted wife, mother and grandmother, lives an inspired “no ordinary” life based on the words found in Colossians 3:23 – “do all things wholeheartedly to the Lord.” This inspiration is at the heart of all she does and has led her to become an entrepreneur, artist, adventurous cook, recipe developer/writer, journaler, and blogger. Find Helen online at Helen’s Table, Instagram:@helenstable, Pinterest, Twitter, My Brother’s Salsa, and No Ordinary Broom.

Christmas Tree Scrapbook {Tour of Trees}

By Brittney Lee

I love Christmas trees. There is something magical about the twinkling lights and festive ornaments. Some of my favorite trees are the beautifully decorated ones that have coordinating ornaments. Each year I admire them in the department stores or at friend’s houses. However, I’ve never wanted to make my tree into a designer tree.  Instead, we have what I call a scrapbook tree.

Ever since I was a little girl, I remember adding a special ornament every year, and often the ornaments had special meaning for that particular year.  I’ve carried that tradition into my adulthood with my own family.  Our tree is a sort of scrapbook with ornaments marking the events of our family- both big and small. Our tree is like looking at a family photo album.

scrapbook tree

There are memories hanging on the branches – memories from friends, milestones, hobbies, vacations. Sure, we have some velvet bows and sparkly glass bulbs…but most of our decorations are sentimental.

We mark our lives with ornaments for our Christmas tree. 

Our memory book tree started with our very first family ornament – an engagement ornament.

engagement ornament

Then we had a custom ornament made to commemorate our wedding and wedding party.

wedding party  ornament

We have special ornaments from our honeymoon in Maui; an ornament given to us by our realtor for our first Christmas in our home; an ornament for our dog, Mikey; and a carved nativity from a vacation to Mexico.

ornaments collage(1)

We have ornaments that mark our hobbies and interests, including my husband’s RC car and my blogging ornament.

I try to add at least one special ornament each year. This year we have two special ornaments – one commemorating our vacation to Lake Fort Smith where we kayaked together for the first time, and the other is a police officer as my husband took a job with the police department this year.

2014 ornaments

To some, my tree might look shabby chic and disordered. But to me, it’s a walk down memory lane that I get to go down when I put up the tree, when I watch the lights twinkle, and when I take it down.  I can’t wait to have children some day and tell them about every special ornament on our tree.  Someday we may have to have TWO trees to hold all the special ornaments.  But either way, I wouldn’t trade these sentimental ornaments for anything.

christmas tree at night

razorback-britt-headshotBrittney is on a mission to be better every day. She blogs her journey at Razorback Britt, where she writes about fitness, faith, cooking, fashion, weekend adventures, and more. She has done some truly remarkable things – she built a house and only got into two fights with her husband, and she once won an electric slide contest. 

A Partridge in a Pear Tree? {Handmade Holiday}

We are a family of traditions – almost obsessively so (as I’ve mentioned over at The Food Adventuress). Still, I’m always looking for new additions to the list of things we love to do together.

Don’t misunderstand – this doesn’t mean I have my act together. Today, for example, I finally removed the remaining pumpkins from our front porch in recognition of the fact that a) it is mid-December and b) they looked kind of goofy along with our Christmas lights. I stand by my reasoning that they work right through Thanksgiving, but then my arguments get a little fuzzy. I promise, though, that pumpkins are (eventually) relevant to this post.

Starting a few years ago, my now eight year old daughter and I began concocting a “bird tree” as part of our holiday traditions. As much as I enjoy things that we can all do as a family (here’s a fantastic, free and easy idea you could still incorporate with your family this year!), I also yearn for those special things I can do to connect with just one child at a time or one on one with my husband.

Our bird tree has evolved from a single branch to trimmings from our real Christmas tree to the point that this year, we’re using a potted tree that will grow slowly and can be reused for many years moving forward. We set it somewhere very visible in the front yard – both for ease of bird-viewing and to incite questions from neighbors and hopefully inspire similar actions from other families. In fact, last year we used the same idea as a holiday staff activity at my workplace, the Ozark Natural Science Center (read Slowing Down with a Cranberry Garland).

The bird tree is meant to be a slowing-down activity, and a gift to nature at a time when many of us are incredibly focused on doing and rushing and buying. We start with a bowl of freshly popped popcorn (on the stove, without all the extras birds do not need) and a bowl of fresh cranberries. We sit together – talking, working slowly, getting sticky, pricking our fingers – and string them into garlands using needles and thread.

When our garlands are complete we set out to hang them on the tree along with quartered oranges, little reusable baskets of birdseed, pinecones with peanut butter and seeds, sunflower heads and anything else we think our feathered friends would safely enjoy. This year, we found some millet sprays to use, and sometimes we add twig or straw stars or other decorations. And, there is some good to those pumpkins left so long and forlornly on the front porch: I cut them into little pieces and found the weather had preserved them. They are full of good meat and seed that will help visiting birds this winter, so some good came of my inability to get things done!

This is such a great activity for anyone, and especially when you can include your own (or some stray neighborhood? With permission, of course!) kids. As an aside, we often start putting birdseed and treats out well before the weather turns very cold in order to start “coaching” the birds that we are the dining establishment to visit all winter long. We also took a little time several years ago to make our yard a certified wildlife habitat through a fantastic program from the National Wildlife Federation – this is another outstanding, free, educational, fun and ongoing family activity!

As you look for meaningful activities this holiday season, think outside the box when you consider handmade holidays. “Crafts” do not have to mean hours of baking and decorating cookies, purchasing pricey supplies or spending hours at a daunting task that may or may not turn out the way you intended. Creating a bird tree feels good, looks good, has a tangible outcome and is one of those tiny steps toward making the world a better place. Happy handmade holiday!

 

Beth is the marketing maven and one of four founding members of Arkansas Women Bloggers, but her real job is as executive director of the Ozark Natural Science Center – a nonprofit field science, environmental education, camp and conference facility in northwest Arkansas. She blogs over at The Little Magpie and The Food Adventuress and finds herself eating far more of her mother’s rum cake around the holidays than she would care to admit.

 

A Crude Little Star {Handmade Holiday}

Written by Julie Kohl of Eggs and Herbs…where creativity meets the farm

I love everything about Christmas except for commercialism.  I’m not at all into the whole Black Friday thing and I’ve never really been into the “gimme, gimme” attitude that a lot of people have around Christmas.  I do love the magic and the surprise and I love getting gifts as much as the next person but my favorite part of Christmas has always been making things.  Whether cookies and cakes, scarves, toys, or ornaments I love making Christmas special.

2000 was the year that the meaning and importance of a handmade Christmas really rang true with me and it involved an empty toilet paper roll, two paper stars and glitter.

My husband Richie and I had been married for less than five months and were about to celebrate our first Christmas together.  We were both in college full time, neither of us was working and we were BROKE!  Living off “extra” loan money that had long since run out, Christmas looked to be a fairly bleak that season.

Sadly Christmas decorations are expensive and are not really budget worthy in a newly married college couples world.  We did splurge and buy a fresh tree that year but everything else had to be borrowed or made.  We borrowed lights and some old ornaments from Richie’s mother.  My sister bought us candles for our windows and we spent a whole Saturday making ornaments together.  We strung popcorn that we popped on the stove, we made cinnamon ornaments and ornaments out of found popsicle sticks and fabric.  It was fun and romantic and we still use most of the ornaments today.  We got everything hung on the tree and I stepped back only to realize we were missing something.  A TREE TOPPER!  There was no angel, no star, no pretty bauble for the top of the tree.  We had literally spent our last dime and could not purchase anything for the top of the tree.

We began to look around.  Surely we had something we could use. We scrounged around and came up with an empty toilet paper roll, two paper stars and some glitter.  Combined with some glue we were able to fashion a very crude star for the top of our tree.  I remember the sense of peace and joy and accomplishment that came over me when Richie placed that star on the top of the tree.

In the years that have followed we have travelled all over the world (Paris, Rome, Alaska, Hawaii, Mexico and all over the US) and collected beautiful Christmas ornaments to remember places we have been.  Still, over 90% of the ornaments on our tree are handmade.  But every year the ornament I most look forward to putting up is that crude little star.  It now lives on a smaller, table-top tree but it is so beautiful to me and it wouldn’t be Christmas without that little star!

 

Julie Kohl is an art teacher by day and loves to write mostly about food and life on the small farm owned by her and her husband on her blog Eggs and Herbs…where creativity meets the farm.  Julie is also the Farm Kitchen writer for The Renegade Farmer and is one of the four founding members of Arkansas Women Bloggers.

Handmade Holiday is the Arkansas Women Bloggers theme of the month.  We would love for you to share your Handmade Holiday story with our readers.  Please visit our Guest Post Guidelines page for information about how to submit a story to ARWB.