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The Rural Voice, 2006-12, Page 33was often someone in each community who grew trees but now growers are few and far between. When the big chain stores got into selling trees at $19 or $20 they dragged the prices down about $10 a tree and made it impossible for many growers to make the business pay, Mathers said. Then there were the people who liked the perfectly shaped artificial tree that could be put up December 1 and left until New Years without dropping a needle. Natural tree prices have started to creep up again with people paying $40-60 on city lots but still, it's a better business as a hobby — as it is for Mathers — than as a living. "Would I do it for a living?" he says. "No, you'd starve to death. You'd be boiling bark to eat." Still, "I'm really glad we did it. We (he and his wife Ila) enjoy having people come out (to the farm)." And they meet all kinds: people who arrive in street shoes, no coat and no gloves to walk through the fields to get a tree; people who lose keys and cellphones that sometimes aren't found until spring, and lots of kids. The teacher in Mathers comes out with the kids. He likes to show them the different kinds of trees and how to identify them by the needles. He enjoys teaching them that trees are crops like soybeans or corn. He teaches them that trees shed needles in September and the new growth generally comes in October through December. In fact if you cut a tree and put it in water it will likely continue to grow for several days. He teaches people the importance of either putting the tree directly into . water after it is cut or cutting off the butt before taking it indoors because the tree will have created a scar on the cut and won't take up water (a tree swill take up about a gallon of water quickly when it's brought indoors, he says). He probably has about four or five years left before his trees are too big for Christmas tree sales. After that he'll still have about 65,000 trees left to grow for eventual lumber harvest. That won't be in his lifetime. "You're planting for your children," he says.0 41) undalk District Credit Union Limited Community Banking & Investment Services Chequing, Savings and Term Deposits Personal Loans, Residential and Farm Mortgages Agricultural and Commercial Loans Mastercard, Money Orders, RRSP's, RESP's, Travellers Cheques, Financial Planning & Mutual Funds by W.H. Stuart Holiday Gr€ei1ii .S r( all our customers T] 1 ;Ct(• tf1C1 79 Proton St. N. DUNDALK, Ont. 519-923-2400 Fax 519-923-2950 Proud to Provide Quality Member Service Since 1943 519-923-2400 email: diannek@dundalkdistrictcreditunion.ca May Christmas Fill Your Home With Joy W4I ILLJL - I1r III_ IiI WI MU IP_ !iv, Warm Holiday Greetings from Mark Harding & Staff ritagt BUILDERS LTD. Harriston, Ontario 519-338-2111 DECEMBER 2006 29