’Tis the season for debating when the tree will go up

FALLS VILLAGE — The official Falls Village Christmas tree lighting and subsequent festivities are Sunday, Dec.4, which alert readers will note is a full three weeks before Christmas.Inspired by a Facebook post from Mike DeMazza, noting that the 2011 tree at his Main Street home is up, The Lakeville Journal poked around town, asking two crucial questions: When does your Christmas tree go up, and is it live or artificial?Ellery “Woods” Sinclair said his family’s tree is not only live, it’s more or less permanent — a Norfolk Island pine they have had for some years now (in a pot).“It used to be two feet, now it’s four or five,” said Sinclair.The Sinclairs usually decorate the night before Christmas Eve, and the decorations come down before New Year’s. “That’s Mary Lu’s deadline,” he said, referring to his wife.At the Crossroads Deli, Mike Hodgkins said, “If it was up to me the tree would go up Christmas Eve. “But I always get outvoted.”The live Hodgkins tree thus goes up a week before Christmas, but daughter Keelin Hodgkins, something of a renegade, uses an artificial tree at her home, for reasons of economy.“I’m not spending money every year on something that’s gonna die,” she said.At Jacobs’ Garage, Judy Jacobs had Dec. 10 or 11 scheduled for tree action. She and her husband go with the live option as well.At Town Hall, First Selectman Pat Mechare said tree trimming usually happens a couple of days before Christmas, and she and her husband use an artificial one, being aware of the potential fire hazard presented by a live tree.“You have to remember, Kurt was fire chief for years. I can’t remember the last time we had a live one.”Some members of the extended Mechare clan put up their tree the weekend after Thanksgiving, but Pat and Kurt Mechare like to wait until their youngest son, Ethan, is home.“He lives in London, and we like him to be there.”Jean Bronson, with her connection to the Great Mountain Forest (her husband is its forester), takes the question of Christmas trees in stride. The Bronsons put up their tree “a week or two before Christmas.”“I used to wait until the kids came home, thinking we’d do it together,” she added. “I wound up doing most of it myself.”Mary Palmer plays both sides of the real versus artificial schism. She has an artificial tree up already, one she got at the transfer station, but she will wait until Dec. 20 to cut down a tree she transplanted a decade ago.“It’s getting too big.”Inspired by the questioning, Palmer and Bronson decided they might as well dig out the Town Hall tree, a small artificial number suitable for, well, a countertop in a town hall.Palmer also had a couple of figures of Victorian-looking ice skaters, to add to the tableau.And in order to give the Town Hall tree a bipartisan and patriotic look, the two put a rather floppy Uncle Sam figure front and center on the tree.

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