When to plant a potted live Christmas tree?












6















We purchased a small potted live Christmas tree. We want to plant it outside. The ground is not frozen, can we plant it the day after Christmas or do we need to wait until spring?



Each year millions of trees are killed for this winter holiday, we are trying to restore life not take it.










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Hi James! Your profile lists your location as Pennsylvania. If that's incorrect, please let us know! Since it's such a large state, can you please tell the lowest temperatures and basics of the winter climate in your specific area? Also, would you please post some pictures? You said the tree is small. Could you be more specific? The short answer from my experience and training is that the tree needs to get out of the house as soon as possible. If you're ground is sufficiently thawed, go right ahead! I've elaborated in my answer, as has @ab2.

    – Sue
    Dec 24 '18 at 23:28


















6















We purchased a small potted live Christmas tree. We want to plant it outside. The ground is not frozen, can we plant it the day after Christmas or do we need to wait until spring?



Each year millions of trees are killed for this winter holiday, we are trying to restore life not take it.










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Hi James! Your profile lists your location as Pennsylvania. If that's incorrect, please let us know! Since it's such a large state, can you please tell the lowest temperatures and basics of the winter climate in your specific area? Also, would you please post some pictures? You said the tree is small. Could you be more specific? The short answer from my experience and training is that the tree needs to get out of the house as soon as possible. If you're ground is sufficiently thawed, go right ahead! I've elaborated in my answer, as has @ab2.

    – Sue
    Dec 24 '18 at 23:28
















6












6








6


2






We purchased a small potted live Christmas tree. We want to plant it outside. The ground is not frozen, can we plant it the day after Christmas or do we need to wait until spring?



Each year millions of trees are killed for this winter holiday, we are trying to restore life not take it.










share|improve this question
















We purchased a small potted live Christmas tree. We want to plant it outside. The ground is not frozen, can we plant it the day after Christmas or do we need to wait until spring?



Each year millions of trees are killed for this winter holiday, we are trying to restore life not take it.







trees






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 27 '18 at 19:22









Charlie Brumbaugh

49.8k16142284




49.8k16142284










asked Dec 24 '18 at 13:11









James JenkinsJames Jenkins

18.8k1066177




18.8k1066177








  • 1





    Hi James! Your profile lists your location as Pennsylvania. If that's incorrect, please let us know! Since it's such a large state, can you please tell the lowest temperatures and basics of the winter climate in your specific area? Also, would you please post some pictures? You said the tree is small. Could you be more specific? The short answer from my experience and training is that the tree needs to get out of the house as soon as possible. If you're ground is sufficiently thawed, go right ahead! I've elaborated in my answer, as has @ab2.

    – Sue
    Dec 24 '18 at 23:28
















  • 1





    Hi James! Your profile lists your location as Pennsylvania. If that's incorrect, please let us know! Since it's such a large state, can you please tell the lowest temperatures and basics of the winter climate in your specific area? Also, would you please post some pictures? You said the tree is small. Could you be more specific? The short answer from my experience and training is that the tree needs to get out of the house as soon as possible. If you're ground is sufficiently thawed, go right ahead! I've elaborated in my answer, as has @ab2.

    – Sue
    Dec 24 '18 at 23:28










1




1





Hi James! Your profile lists your location as Pennsylvania. If that's incorrect, please let us know! Since it's such a large state, can you please tell the lowest temperatures and basics of the winter climate in your specific area? Also, would you please post some pictures? You said the tree is small. Could you be more specific? The short answer from my experience and training is that the tree needs to get out of the house as soon as possible. If you're ground is sufficiently thawed, go right ahead! I've elaborated in my answer, as has @ab2.

– Sue
Dec 24 '18 at 23:28







Hi James! Your profile lists your location as Pennsylvania. If that's incorrect, please let us know! Since it's such a large state, can you please tell the lowest temperatures and basics of the winter climate in your specific area? Also, would you please post some pictures? You said the tree is small. Could you be more specific? The short answer from my experience and training is that the tree needs to get out of the house as soon as possible. If you're ground is sufficiently thawed, go right ahead! I've elaborated in my answer, as has @ab2.

– Sue
Dec 24 '18 at 23:28












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















2














Thanks for buying a live tree! We're in Massachusetts, and had success under the direction of a horticulturist.



The tree must be inside for the least possible amount of time, no more than a week or two, so don't buy it too many days before Christmas, and plant it as soon as you can after the holiday. Too much time in a warm dry room will cause difficulty adjusting to its natural conditions. It may even sprout new growth that will die once you put it out, compromising the entire tree.



Our tree was dug up the day before we got it; stayed in our 3-season room with daytime temperatures in the 50s F, nights in the 30s F; and transplanted out on the 11th day.



You only need sufficient thawed ground and sun in the place you're going to put it, even if other areas are frozen. Even if the ground freezes after you've prepared the hole, you can still plant the tree, using the dirt you dug up. Many people dig the hole earlier in the season.



Caring for and planting live Christmas trees:




Try to plant the tree immediately after the holiday hoopla has ended. The tree should not be stored above ground during the winter if it can be avoided. It’s not a good idea to store it in your garage either, as it is likely to dry out in there. The best place for live Christmas trees is to be is planted in the ground, even if the ground was frozen as soon as the hole was dug. Just set the tree in the hole and backfill the hole with the loose soil you saved in your wheelbarrow.




From Replanting a Christmas Tree:




When you decide to replant a Christmas tree outside after the holidays, you also need to accept that you will not be able to enjoy the tree indoors as long as you would a cut tree. This is because indoor conditions can put a live Christmas tree at risk. Expect that your Christmas tree will only be able to be in the house for 1 to 1½ weeks. Any longer than this, you reduce the chance that your Christmas tree will be able to adapt to conditions outside again.




All trees are susceptible to Transplant Shock. The tree has already been transplanted when you get it. Further transplants increase the stress, so the entire process must be done carefully.



Ours was a four foot tall blue spruce, and came with the roots in a burlap bag. These instructions from our horticulturist worked perfectly.



While inside:




  • Keep the rootball intact in its original burlap (If yours isn't in burlap, the same instructions are fine. Just gather the roots together.)

  • Put it in a tub with a diameter just a few larger than the rootball

  • Water it every few days from the top, keeping the rootball moist but not soggy or sitting in a lot of stagnant water

  • Keep it in a cool room if possible.

  • Don't use hot Christmas lights, and only leave them on for short periods of time


For planting:




  • Before purchase, dig a hole at least 36 inches wide and 24 inches deep

  • Plant the tree outside within 10 to 12 days

  • Set it into the hole with the rootball level with the ground

  • Backfill the hole with its own dirt and some light mulch or shredded leaves

  • Don't water the hole, the dirt, the rootball, or the tree during planting

  • Don't water the tree at all until about 3 months from Christmas, at the end of March


Here are some pictures. The first two are in the house. The second two are the prepared hole.



Full tree in bucketClose up of root ballHoleAnother image of the hole






share|improve this answer


























  • We did this a bunch of times as well when I was young. The trees don't have enough roots to survive for long. Most healthy trees are roughly as big below ground as above it. If the trees are to make it until spring they need to be allowed to grow new roots. This means planting them outside, or in a really, really serious plant pot. They will probably still get worse before they get better, but most of our trees lived, and at least one of them stayed beautiful enough that it got a secomd season as our Christmas tree. (We did end up removing them all in favor of other plants in the end.)

    – Monster
    Dec 26 '18 at 0:02



















3














Trees that grow in cold climates have a chilling requirement -- a certain number of hours below a certain temp that they must have before they break bud. If they don't get enough chill, they don't leaf out in spring. This is a protective mechanism so that the tree isn't sucked in by a mid-winter thaw.



If the tree was grown locally, then it will probably NOT have enough chilling hours by Christmas. Most trees don't have enough for their local climate until around end of February.



So you need to get it back out in the cold.



If you are in a warm climate, where the ground isn't frozen, plant it now.



If the ground is frozen, put it outside out of the wind, out of the sun and bury the root ball in snow. You can also save bags of dried leaves for this purpose in fall.



If you know where you are going to plant it, predig the hole in fall. You can either keep enough dirt inside to finish planting it, or keep the hole filled with leaves and covered with a scrap of plywood, then place the tree in the hole, rebury with leaves, and plant properly when the ground thaws.



Do NOT let the tree dry out inside. Keep in a cool room (below 65, or better below 60 F) and keep inside for only a week.



Some people put on the patio. You can decorated it still -- LED lights won't warm it up enough to matter. Water it by keeping snow or ice cubes on top of hte root ball.






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    Thanks for buying a live tree! We're in Massachusetts, and had success under the direction of a horticulturist.



    The tree must be inside for the least possible amount of time, no more than a week or two, so don't buy it too many days before Christmas, and plant it as soon as you can after the holiday. Too much time in a warm dry room will cause difficulty adjusting to its natural conditions. It may even sprout new growth that will die once you put it out, compromising the entire tree.



    Our tree was dug up the day before we got it; stayed in our 3-season room with daytime temperatures in the 50s F, nights in the 30s F; and transplanted out on the 11th day.



    You only need sufficient thawed ground and sun in the place you're going to put it, even if other areas are frozen. Even if the ground freezes after you've prepared the hole, you can still plant the tree, using the dirt you dug up. Many people dig the hole earlier in the season.



    Caring for and planting live Christmas trees:




    Try to plant the tree immediately after the holiday hoopla has ended. The tree should not be stored above ground during the winter if it can be avoided. It’s not a good idea to store it in your garage either, as it is likely to dry out in there. The best place for live Christmas trees is to be is planted in the ground, even if the ground was frozen as soon as the hole was dug. Just set the tree in the hole and backfill the hole with the loose soil you saved in your wheelbarrow.




    From Replanting a Christmas Tree:




    When you decide to replant a Christmas tree outside after the holidays, you also need to accept that you will not be able to enjoy the tree indoors as long as you would a cut tree. This is because indoor conditions can put a live Christmas tree at risk. Expect that your Christmas tree will only be able to be in the house for 1 to 1½ weeks. Any longer than this, you reduce the chance that your Christmas tree will be able to adapt to conditions outside again.




    All trees are susceptible to Transplant Shock. The tree has already been transplanted when you get it. Further transplants increase the stress, so the entire process must be done carefully.



    Ours was a four foot tall blue spruce, and came with the roots in a burlap bag. These instructions from our horticulturist worked perfectly.



    While inside:




    • Keep the rootball intact in its original burlap (If yours isn't in burlap, the same instructions are fine. Just gather the roots together.)

    • Put it in a tub with a diameter just a few larger than the rootball

    • Water it every few days from the top, keeping the rootball moist but not soggy or sitting in a lot of stagnant water

    • Keep it in a cool room if possible.

    • Don't use hot Christmas lights, and only leave them on for short periods of time


    For planting:




    • Before purchase, dig a hole at least 36 inches wide and 24 inches deep

    • Plant the tree outside within 10 to 12 days

    • Set it into the hole with the rootball level with the ground

    • Backfill the hole with its own dirt and some light mulch or shredded leaves

    • Don't water the hole, the dirt, the rootball, or the tree during planting

    • Don't water the tree at all until about 3 months from Christmas, at the end of March


    Here are some pictures. The first two are in the house. The second two are the prepared hole.



    Full tree in bucketClose up of root ballHoleAnother image of the hole






    share|improve this answer


























    • We did this a bunch of times as well when I was young. The trees don't have enough roots to survive for long. Most healthy trees are roughly as big below ground as above it. If the trees are to make it until spring they need to be allowed to grow new roots. This means planting them outside, or in a really, really serious plant pot. They will probably still get worse before they get better, but most of our trees lived, and at least one of them stayed beautiful enough that it got a secomd season as our Christmas tree. (We did end up removing them all in favor of other plants in the end.)

      – Monster
      Dec 26 '18 at 0:02
















    2














    Thanks for buying a live tree! We're in Massachusetts, and had success under the direction of a horticulturist.



    The tree must be inside for the least possible amount of time, no more than a week or two, so don't buy it too many days before Christmas, and plant it as soon as you can after the holiday. Too much time in a warm dry room will cause difficulty adjusting to its natural conditions. It may even sprout new growth that will die once you put it out, compromising the entire tree.



    Our tree was dug up the day before we got it; stayed in our 3-season room with daytime temperatures in the 50s F, nights in the 30s F; and transplanted out on the 11th day.



    You only need sufficient thawed ground and sun in the place you're going to put it, even if other areas are frozen. Even if the ground freezes after you've prepared the hole, you can still plant the tree, using the dirt you dug up. Many people dig the hole earlier in the season.



    Caring for and planting live Christmas trees:




    Try to plant the tree immediately after the holiday hoopla has ended. The tree should not be stored above ground during the winter if it can be avoided. It’s not a good idea to store it in your garage either, as it is likely to dry out in there. The best place for live Christmas trees is to be is planted in the ground, even if the ground was frozen as soon as the hole was dug. Just set the tree in the hole and backfill the hole with the loose soil you saved in your wheelbarrow.




    From Replanting a Christmas Tree:




    When you decide to replant a Christmas tree outside after the holidays, you also need to accept that you will not be able to enjoy the tree indoors as long as you would a cut tree. This is because indoor conditions can put a live Christmas tree at risk. Expect that your Christmas tree will only be able to be in the house for 1 to 1½ weeks. Any longer than this, you reduce the chance that your Christmas tree will be able to adapt to conditions outside again.




    All trees are susceptible to Transplant Shock. The tree has already been transplanted when you get it. Further transplants increase the stress, so the entire process must be done carefully.



    Ours was a four foot tall blue spruce, and came with the roots in a burlap bag. These instructions from our horticulturist worked perfectly.



    While inside:




    • Keep the rootball intact in its original burlap (If yours isn't in burlap, the same instructions are fine. Just gather the roots together.)

    • Put it in a tub with a diameter just a few larger than the rootball

    • Water it every few days from the top, keeping the rootball moist but not soggy or sitting in a lot of stagnant water

    • Keep it in a cool room if possible.

    • Don't use hot Christmas lights, and only leave them on for short periods of time


    For planting:




    • Before purchase, dig a hole at least 36 inches wide and 24 inches deep

    • Plant the tree outside within 10 to 12 days

    • Set it into the hole with the rootball level with the ground

    • Backfill the hole with its own dirt and some light mulch or shredded leaves

    • Don't water the hole, the dirt, the rootball, or the tree during planting

    • Don't water the tree at all until about 3 months from Christmas, at the end of March


    Here are some pictures. The first two are in the house. The second two are the prepared hole.



    Full tree in bucketClose up of root ballHoleAnother image of the hole






    share|improve this answer


























    • We did this a bunch of times as well when I was young. The trees don't have enough roots to survive for long. Most healthy trees are roughly as big below ground as above it. If the trees are to make it until spring they need to be allowed to grow new roots. This means planting them outside, or in a really, really serious plant pot. They will probably still get worse before they get better, but most of our trees lived, and at least one of them stayed beautiful enough that it got a secomd season as our Christmas tree. (We did end up removing them all in favor of other plants in the end.)

      – Monster
      Dec 26 '18 at 0:02














    2












    2








    2







    Thanks for buying a live tree! We're in Massachusetts, and had success under the direction of a horticulturist.



    The tree must be inside for the least possible amount of time, no more than a week or two, so don't buy it too many days before Christmas, and plant it as soon as you can after the holiday. Too much time in a warm dry room will cause difficulty adjusting to its natural conditions. It may even sprout new growth that will die once you put it out, compromising the entire tree.



    Our tree was dug up the day before we got it; stayed in our 3-season room with daytime temperatures in the 50s F, nights in the 30s F; and transplanted out on the 11th day.



    You only need sufficient thawed ground and sun in the place you're going to put it, even if other areas are frozen. Even if the ground freezes after you've prepared the hole, you can still plant the tree, using the dirt you dug up. Many people dig the hole earlier in the season.



    Caring for and planting live Christmas trees:




    Try to plant the tree immediately after the holiday hoopla has ended. The tree should not be stored above ground during the winter if it can be avoided. It’s not a good idea to store it in your garage either, as it is likely to dry out in there. The best place for live Christmas trees is to be is planted in the ground, even if the ground was frozen as soon as the hole was dug. Just set the tree in the hole and backfill the hole with the loose soil you saved in your wheelbarrow.




    From Replanting a Christmas Tree:




    When you decide to replant a Christmas tree outside after the holidays, you also need to accept that you will not be able to enjoy the tree indoors as long as you would a cut tree. This is because indoor conditions can put a live Christmas tree at risk. Expect that your Christmas tree will only be able to be in the house for 1 to 1½ weeks. Any longer than this, you reduce the chance that your Christmas tree will be able to adapt to conditions outside again.




    All trees are susceptible to Transplant Shock. The tree has already been transplanted when you get it. Further transplants increase the stress, so the entire process must be done carefully.



    Ours was a four foot tall blue spruce, and came with the roots in a burlap bag. These instructions from our horticulturist worked perfectly.



    While inside:




    • Keep the rootball intact in its original burlap (If yours isn't in burlap, the same instructions are fine. Just gather the roots together.)

    • Put it in a tub with a diameter just a few larger than the rootball

    • Water it every few days from the top, keeping the rootball moist but not soggy or sitting in a lot of stagnant water

    • Keep it in a cool room if possible.

    • Don't use hot Christmas lights, and only leave them on for short periods of time


    For planting:




    • Before purchase, dig a hole at least 36 inches wide and 24 inches deep

    • Plant the tree outside within 10 to 12 days

    • Set it into the hole with the rootball level with the ground

    • Backfill the hole with its own dirt and some light mulch or shredded leaves

    • Don't water the hole, the dirt, the rootball, or the tree during planting

    • Don't water the tree at all until about 3 months from Christmas, at the end of March


    Here are some pictures. The first two are in the house. The second two are the prepared hole.



    Full tree in bucketClose up of root ballHoleAnother image of the hole






    share|improve this answer















    Thanks for buying a live tree! We're in Massachusetts, and had success under the direction of a horticulturist.



    The tree must be inside for the least possible amount of time, no more than a week or two, so don't buy it too many days before Christmas, and plant it as soon as you can after the holiday. Too much time in a warm dry room will cause difficulty adjusting to its natural conditions. It may even sprout new growth that will die once you put it out, compromising the entire tree.



    Our tree was dug up the day before we got it; stayed in our 3-season room with daytime temperatures in the 50s F, nights in the 30s F; and transplanted out on the 11th day.



    You only need sufficient thawed ground and sun in the place you're going to put it, even if other areas are frozen. Even if the ground freezes after you've prepared the hole, you can still plant the tree, using the dirt you dug up. Many people dig the hole earlier in the season.



    Caring for and planting live Christmas trees:




    Try to plant the tree immediately after the holiday hoopla has ended. The tree should not be stored above ground during the winter if it can be avoided. It’s not a good idea to store it in your garage either, as it is likely to dry out in there. The best place for live Christmas trees is to be is planted in the ground, even if the ground was frozen as soon as the hole was dug. Just set the tree in the hole and backfill the hole with the loose soil you saved in your wheelbarrow.




    From Replanting a Christmas Tree:




    When you decide to replant a Christmas tree outside after the holidays, you also need to accept that you will not be able to enjoy the tree indoors as long as you would a cut tree. This is because indoor conditions can put a live Christmas tree at risk. Expect that your Christmas tree will only be able to be in the house for 1 to 1½ weeks. Any longer than this, you reduce the chance that your Christmas tree will be able to adapt to conditions outside again.




    All trees are susceptible to Transplant Shock. The tree has already been transplanted when you get it. Further transplants increase the stress, so the entire process must be done carefully.



    Ours was a four foot tall blue spruce, and came with the roots in a burlap bag. These instructions from our horticulturist worked perfectly.



    While inside:




    • Keep the rootball intact in its original burlap (If yours isn't in burlap, the same instructions are fine. Just gather the roots together.)

    • Put it in a tub with a diameter just a few larger than the rootball

    • Water it every few days from the top, keeping the rootball moist but not soggy or sitting in a lot of stagnant water

    • Keep it in a cool room if possible.

    • Don't use hot Christmas lights, and only leave them on for short periods of time


    For planting:




    • Before purchase, dig a hole at least 36 inches wide and 24 inches deep

    • Plant the tree outside within 10 to 12 days

    • Set it into the hole with the rootball level with the ground

    • Backfill the hole with its own dirt and some light mulch or shredded leaves

    • Don't water the hole, the dirt, the rootball, or the tree during planting

    • Don't water the tree at all until about 3 months from Christmas, at the end of March


    Here are some pictures. The first two are in the house. The second two are the prepared hole.



    Full tree in bucketClose up of root ballHoleAnother image of the hole







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Dec 27 '18 at 5:01

























    answered Dec 24 '18 at 21:24









    SueSue

    10.6k33097




    10.6k33097













    • We did this a bunch of times as well when I was young. The trees don't have enough roots to survive for long. Most healthy trees are roughly as big below ground as above it. If the trees are to make it until spring they need to be allowed to grow new roots. This means planting them outside, or in a really, really serious plant pot. They will probably still get worse before they get better, but most of our trees lived, and at least one of them stayed beautiful enough that it got a secomd season as our Christmas tree. (We did end up removing them all in favor of other plants in the end.)

      – Monster
      Dec 26 '18 at 0:02



















    • We did this a bunch of times as well when I was young. The trees don't have enough roots to survive for long. Most healthy trees are roughly as big below ground as above it. If the trees are to make it until spring they need to be allowed to grow new roots. This means planting them outside, or in a really, really serious plant pot. They will probably still get worse before they get better, but most of our trees lived, and at least one of them stayed beautiful enough that it got a secomd season as our Christmas tree. (We did end up removing them all in favor of other plants in the end.)

      – Monster
      Dec 26 '18 at 0:02

















    We did this a bunch of times as well when I was young. The trees don't have enough roots to survive for long. Most healthy trees are roughly as big below ground as above it. If the trees are to make it until spring they need to be allowed to grow new roots. This means planting them outside, or in a really, really serious plant pot. They will probably still get worse before they get better, but most of our trees lived, and at least one of them stayed beautiful enough that it got a secomd season as our Christmas tree. (We did end up removing them all in favor of other plants in the end.)

    – Monster
    Dec 26 '18 at 0:02





    We did this a bunch of times as well when I was young. The trees don't have enough roots to survive for long. Most healthy trees are roughly as big below ground as above it. If the trees are to make it until spring they need to be allowed to grow new roots. This means planting them outside, or in a really, really serious plant pot. They will probably still get worse before they get better, but most of our trees lived, and at least one of them stayed beautiful enough that it got a secomd season as our Christmas tree. (We did end up removing them all in favor of other plants in the end.)

    – Monster
    Dec 26 '18 at 0:02











    3














    Trees that grow in cold climates have a chilling requirement -- a certain number of hours below a certain temp that they must have before they break bud. If they don't get enough chill, they don't leaf out in spring. This is a protective mechanism so that the tree isn't sucked in by a mid-winter thaw.



    If the tree was grown locally, then it will probably NOT have enough chilling hours by Christmas. Most trees don't have enough for their local climate until around end of February.



    So you need to get it back out in the cold.



    If you are in a warm climate, where the ground isn't frozen, plant it now.



    If the ground is frozen, put it outside out of the wind, out of the sun and bury the root ball in snow. You can also save bags of dried leaves for this purpose in fall.



    If you know where you are going to plant it, predig the hole in fall. You can either keep enough dirt inside to finish planting it, or keep the hole filled with leaves and covered with a scrap of plywood, then place the tree in the hole, rebury with leaves, and plant properly when the ground thaws.



    Do NOT let the tree dry out inside. Keep in a cool room (below 65, or better below 60 F) and keep inside for only a week.



    Some people put on the patio. You can decorated it still -- LED lights won't warm it up enough to matter. Water it by keeping snow or ice cubes on top of hte root ball.






    share|improve this answer




























      3














      Trees that grow in cold climates have a chilling requirement -- a certain number of hours below a certain temp that they must have before they break bud. If they don't get enough chill, they don't leaf out in spring. This is a protective mechanism so that the tree isn't sucked in by a mid-winter thaw.



      If the tree was grown locally, then it will probably NOT have enough chilling hours by Christmas. Most trees don't have enough for their local climate until around end of February.



      So you need to get it back out in the cold.



      If you are in a warm climate, where the ground isn't frozen, plant it now.



      If the ground is frozen, put it outside out of the wind, out of the sun and bury the root ball in snow. You can also save bags of dried leaves for this purpose in fall.



      If you know where you are going to plant it, predig the hole in fall. You can either keep enough dirt inside to finish planting it, or keep the hole filled with leaves and covered with a scrap of plywood, then place the tree in the hole, rebury with leaves, and plant properly when the ground thaws.



      Do NOT let the tree dry out inside. Keep in a cool room (below 65, or better below 60 F) and keep inside for only a week.



      Some people put on the patio. You can decorated it still -- LED lights won't warm it up enough to matter. Water it by keeping snow or ice cubes on top of hte root ball.






      share|improve this answer


























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        Trees that grow in cold climates have a chilling requirement -- a certain number of hours below a certain temp that they must have before they break bud. If they don't get enough chill, they don't leaf out in spring. This is a protective mechanism so that the tree isn't sucked in by a mid-winter thaw.



        If the tree was grown locally, then it will probably NOT have enough chilling hours by Christmas. Most trees don't have enough for their local climate until around end of February.



        So you need to get it back out in the cold.



        If you are in a warm climate, where the ground isn't frozen, plant it now.



        If the ground is frozen, put it outside out of the wind, out of the sun and bury the root ball in snow. You can also save bags of dried leaves for this purpose in fall.



        If you know where you are going to plant it, predig the hole in fall. You can either keep enough dirt inside to finish planting it, or keep the hole filled with leaves and covered with a scrap of plywood, then place the tree in the hole, rebury with leaves, and plant properly when the ground thaws.



        Do NOT let the tree dry out inside. Keep in a cool room (below 65, or better below 60 F) and keep inside for only a week.



        Some people put on the patio. You can decorated it still -- LED lights won't warm it up enough to matter. Water it by keeping snow or ice cubes on top of hte root ball.






        share|improve this answer













        Trees that grow in cold climates have a chilling requirement -- a certain number of hours below a certain temp that they must have before they break bud. If they don't get enough chill, they don't leaf out in spring. This is a protective mechanism so that the tree isn't sucked in by a mid-winter thaw.



        If the tree was grown locally, then it will probably NOT have enough chilling hours by Christmas. Most trees don't have enough for their local climate until around end of February.



        So you need to get it back out in the cold.



        If you are in a warm climate, where the ground isn't frozen, plant it now.



        If the ground is frozen, put it outside out of the wind, out of the sun and bury the root ball in snow. You can also save bags of dried leaves for this purpose in fall.



        If you know where you are going to plant it, predig the hole in fall. You can either keep enough dirt inside to finish planting it, or keep the hole filled with leaves and covered with a scrap of plywood, then place the tree in the hole, rebury with leaves, and plant properly when the ground thaws.



        Do NOT let the tree dry out inside. Keep in a cool room (below 65, or better below 60 F) and keep inside for only a week.



        Some people put on the patio. You can decorated it still -- LED lights won't warm it up enough to matter. Water it by keeping snow or ice cubes on top of hte root ball.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 26 '18 at 5:41









        Sherwood BotsfordSherwood Botsford

        7,37211746




        7,37211746






























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