Live Potted Nobel Firs |
Charlie Brown Trees |
Wintercreek Farm
“I
planted them as seedlings five years ago, starting with Douglas fir
(and they) have just taken off and are ready for cutting this year,” she
says. “(They) may even be a little too big … they’ve all grown
naturally. The 74-year-old farmer, who has raised crops and livestock
for decades, said she just got bored and needed something to keep her
occupied.“I’m learning as I go along … (it’s) sort of a new thing for
me,” she said. “It’s just something I wanted to do. I decided I would
(farm) trees before I got too old to do it.” With more than a thousand
of them on her lot, from firs of the concolor (white), Douglas, Fraser,
grand and noble varieties to pine trees at various stages of
development, Palfrey tends to them every day and even admits having
mixed emotions about letting go of the crop she has cared for over the
past five years. “My husband said I would never sell them because I am
always talking to them – I spend a lot of time out there,” she said,
laughing. “I just like trees around here; they are nice and don’t talk
back.” Palfrey, who lives on the farm with her husband, said despite
having arthritis and finding it challenging to be out there some days,
she still can’t get enough of the smell and has no plans to stop anytime
soon. “Families (enjoy cutting) them down; it is like an adventure for a
child,” she said. “If you are cutting it down, taking it home, setting
it up and breathing in the scent, it is beautiful.”
Arnold Lim/News Gazette staff
article 2015 Goldstream Gazette
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