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Friday, December 03, 2010

O’MALLEY FAMILY TO CUT FRESH, LOCAL CHRISTMAS TREE

First Family Encourages Marylanders to Buy Locally Grown Christmas Trees from Local Farms

ANNAPOLIS, MD
– Governor Martin O’Malley, First Lady Katie O’Malley and their children will kick off the holiday season by visiting a Maryland family farm to cut their own fresh, local tree for the holidays. The O’Malley family encourages all Marylanders to buy their Christmas tree from a local farm.

When buying directly from a local farmer, dollars circulate through the local economy four times, strengthening our communities. In addition, the farms that grow Christmas trees stabilize soil, protect water supplies and provide wildlife habitat while creating scenic green belts.

Tree varieties grown in Maryland include: Douglas-fir, Concolor Fir, Canaan Fir, Fraser Fir, Scotch Pine, White Pine, and Blue Spruce.

While they're growing, real Christmas trees absorb carbon dioxide and other gases and emit fresh oxygen, unlike artificial trees which are petroleum-based. When growing in open space, a 3” in diameter Douglas Fir tree can reduce atmospheric carbon by 23 pounds and intercept 102 gallons of storm water runoff per year.

According to the 2007 Census of Agriculture, of the 200 tree growing farms in Maryland, 168 farms harvested 77,801 trees valued at $2.4 million. In Maryland, Carroll County has the greatest number of cut Christmas tree farms with 22. Baltimore, Frederick, Garrett and Montgomery round out the top five counties. There are about 15,000 Christmas tree growers in the U.S., and over 100,000 people employed full or part time in the industry. Tree planting, shearing and mowing can take up to 65 hours a week, 52 weeks a year.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

hes cutting down the tree?! what happened to protecting our environment?! hes such a 'crit!

Anonymous said...

These trees are grown for this purpose, duh. Support the tree farmer and shut up.

Sort of lukewarm about O'Malley, but love his old dog so he can't be all bad. Also, I had a pastor once who had a tree farm, God rest his soul.