Mansion's trees arrive

Tom Jingst, right, and Russell Clennin, both of the Misssouri Department of Conservation, tug at the rope around an 18-foot white pine tree to get it situated inside the stairwell in the Governor's Mansion. The inside tree is from Pea Ridge Forest, a Christmas tree farm near Hermann. It will be decorated for Christmas activities that begin with the annual tree lighting at 6:15 p.m. Friday.
Tom Jingst, right, and Russell Clennin, both of the Misssouri Department of Conservation, tug at the rope around an 18-foot white pine tree to get it situated inside the stairwell in the Governor's Mansion. The inside tree is from Pea Ridge Forest, a Christmas tree farm near Hermann. It will be decorated for Christmas activities that begin with the annual tree lighting at 6:15 p.m. Friday.

Thousands of people who see the governor's mansion in Jefferson City during the holiday season will get to admire a 30-foot Christmas tree from Independence.

Finding the official Christmas tree for display in front of the governor's mansion is a long-standing tradition for the Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC). Each year toward the end of the summer, MDC issues a statewide call for nominations and Missourians are encouraged to send photos of prospective trees, all of which are reviewed by MDC Forestry staff.

"The tree selected for the mansion lawn is a 30-foot eastern red cedar donated by Bud Perrin of Independence," MDC Forestry Program Supervisor Holly Dentner said. "His tree was one of 18 submissions we received this year."

The tree was removed from Perrin's yard by MDC crews on Nov. 22 and placed on the mansion lawn Monday morning. The official tree lighting ceremony will take place Friday.

Missouri's eastern red cedars often grow on glades, bluffs, rocky woods, pastures, and along roadsides and fencerows. They are the most common native conifer in the state.

The selection criteria for the governor's mansion Christmas tree include practical concerns such as how accessible the tree is for removal, its size, species, and appearance. MDC looks for trees that have to be removed for home expansion, utility work or space limitations. In this instance, Perrin's tree had become too large for the backyard and it was going to be removed this fall.

MDC also provided the governor's mansion with seven white pine trees to be placed throughout the mansion. The white pines came from Pea Ridge Forest, a Christmas tree farm and wholesale nursery near Hermann.

For information about how to care for Christmas trees, visit on.mo.gov/2gGWX1l.

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