Seven ways to recycle your Christmas tree

A Christmas bauble hangs from a tree inside a store in the U.K. Photographer: Luke MacGregor/Bloomberg

When the celebrations are over and decorations have been packed away, it’s time to think about how to reuse your cut Christmas tree, instead of sending it to landfill. From shredding it to make mulch to using it as a frame for climbing plants, there are many ways to put the wood and needles to good use.

Discover six ways to recycle your Christmas tree, below. Plus, find out what to do with your living, containerised (pot-grown) Christmas tree.

Looking for inspiration for fabulously festive plants for your home or to gift loved ones? We share our favourite Christmas plants.


 

Create woodchip mulch

Mulching a euphorbia

Convert your old Christmas tree into useful woodchip mulch by putting it through a shredder. Stack the chips at the back of a border for a few months to rot down before using them to mulch around trees and shrubs. If you don’t own a shredder, you can rent one, ask a neighbour, or contact your local gardening club. Find out which areas to mulch in your garden.

 

Make mulch from the needles

Recycle the Christmas tree

Keep the Christmas tree on the patio until the needles fall off, then collect the needles to use as a mulch for acid-loving plants such as blueberries. Discover acid-loving plants in our Plant Finder.

 

Use it as a frame for climbers

How to grow sweet peas in pots from plugs

Plant the bare tree in a garden border, then grow climbers such as sweet peas over it. You can also use twiggy branches as plant supports – keep them somewhere dry and use them in the summer. Take inspiration from these 10 scented climbers.

 

Create a wildlife shelter

Make a log pile

Trim twigs to short lengths, tie them in a bundle, then hang in a bush for bugs to hide in. Or, chop the trunk into pieces and stack to create a mini refuge for wildlife. Learn three ways to build a deadwood habitat.

 

Use as insulation for tender plants

Branch of a Christmas tree

Chop large branches from the tree, and lay them over plants on the soil surface to protect them from frost. These 10 common garden plants need winter protection.

 

Give it to your local council, garden centre or nature reserve

Choosing a Christmas tree

Give the tree to your local council’s green waste scheme. Most councils collect festive conifers in the new year and chip them to make municipal compost or mulch. You can also contact your local garden centre, or donate your tree to a coastal nature reserve, where it may be used to stabilise sand dunes.

 

 Make a bug hotel

Recycling Christmas tree branches for a bug hotel

Use the branches of your Christmas tree to create a bug hotel, perfect to help creatures through the colder months.


More ways to recycle Christmas

Natural decorations

  • Hang out holly and other berried greenery for birds to eat
  • Stuff foliage inside a large flower pot, turned on its side for bees and other insects to nest in
  • Chop up and compost

Peelings and leftovers

  • Mix raw veg and fruit remains with a little paper and add to the compost heap or bin
  • Use leftover fat or oil mixed with unsalted nuts and dried fruit to make a high-energy bird food

Get more advice on composting Christmas in our video guide.


Is yours a living, pot-grown tree?

Most Christmas trees sold in pots like to be kept cool. Providing you’ve kept your tree in a cool indoor position for a couple of weeks at most, it should survive. You could plant it out in the garden after Christmas, or repot it into a larger pot until next year.

Pot cut out


from BBC Gardeners World Magazine https://ift.tt/287w0kc