10 Ways to Repurpose Your Christmas Tree

Photo of a live Christmas tree in a natural setting, adorned with beads and ornaments.
Christmas trees can shelter and feed wildlife long after the holidays.  

Ping. Ping. Ping. As the needles fall from your Christmas tree are you wondering if you can repurpose it somehow?  Well, here are a few environmentally smart, garden-friendly ideas. 

  1. Make it a living birdfeeder.  Leave your tree in its stand or put it into a large pot or bucket weighted with rocks.  Put it on your deck or patio where you can see it or lean it against a fence. 
  2. Next, have fun decorating it with food for birds and other animals.  Try apple or orange slices or halves, suet cakes, dried fruit, mini bagels, bunches of dried seed heads or berries or whole sunflower heads.
  3. Spread a peanut butter and cornmeal mixture onto pinecones, then roll them in birdseed and hang.  String popcorn for a festive garland. 
  4. Protect wildlife by using natural materials like raffia, jute or cotton string for hangers.
  5. Create shelter.  Lay down your tree in the corner of your property or at the edge of your woods or meadow to give birds and other small animals cover from predators and nasty weather.  This is a gift that keeps giving.  As it decays in the coming years, your former Christmas tree’s wood will feed many living creatures and the soil. 
  6. Make mulch. Break out your shredder or join with neighbors in renting a shredder to chip branches for mulch. 
  7. Create compost.  Shredded wood can also be added to your compost pile.  And no, the conifer needles will not acidify a compost pile. 
  8. Winterize your perennials.  Cut branches from your tree and lay them over your perennials to protect them from snow and reduce frost heaving.  Remove the branches in early spring. 
  9. Feed your fire pit.  Cut boughs can be used to feed your fire pit.  Evergreens tend to have an abundance of sap, so only use their branches as fire starters and fuel in outdoor fire pits, not indoor fireplaces or stoves.
  10. Beautify containers. Fill your outside containers with cut branches. Add colorful winterberries, dried seed heads, and a bow for an attractive winter look. 
  11. Build garden edging.  Dried and sliced 2-inch trunk rounds can be set on end in a shallow trench to make a natural border for garden beds. 
  12. Get crafty.  Let the wood dry for several months, then slice the trunk and branches into rounds for crafting.  A quick online search on “repurposing Christmas trees” yields many craft options from trivets and coasters to napkin rings and ornaments.  
  13. Donate your tree.  Towns and counties often collect Christmas trees to chip and use as mulch.  Check with your town or county offices to learn more. 

Your Christmas tree can live on in a dozen different ways after the holidays.  I hope this year you’ll be creative in giving those boughs new life. 

By Annette Cormany, Principal Agent Associate and Master Gardener Coordinator, Washington County, University of Maryland Extension.

This article was previously published by Herald-Mail Media. Read more by Annette.

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