Apparently, the best way to harvest Christmas trees is by helicopter

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Apparently, the best way to harvest Christmas trees is by helicopter

For an episode called “Treepocalypse Now,” the documentary filmmakers at Great Big Story headed out to Corvallis, Oregon, home of Holiday Tree Farms; at 8,000 acres, it’s one of the largest Christmas tree farms in the world. There, veteran tree farmer Mark Arkills has a daunting challenge in front of him: harvesting a million trees in just six short weeks. The trees have to be cut down, processed, and put on a truck in a very brief window of time. “That means you gotta move fast,” Arkills explains. “As soon as harvest starts, it’s time to call in the cavalry.” Apparently, the quickest, most efficient way of harvesting Christmas trees is by helicopter. After the individual trees are cut down by chainsaws, it’s time to attach them to a harness and fly them to a waiting truck. It almost looks like the trees are being medevacked to safety. Arkills says a helicopter can harvest about a thousand trees an hour.

It all seems pretty stressful, but the jovial Arkills seems to be remarkably at peace with the process. He takes a lot of pride in his work, cheerfully pointing out that Christmas trees outnumber human beings in Oregon by a ratio of 12 to one. He says that harvest is actually his favorite time of year, because it’s when six to eight years of work are finally rewarded. That’s how long it takes for a pine tree to grow to a respectable, Christmas-worthy size. Naturally, like Charlie Brown, Arkills has little love for artificial trees:

They’re our number one competition, obviously. We real tree farmers have a saying about fake trees: Nine years in the house, nine million years in the landfill. They cannot be recycled. It’s Christmas. Keep it real.

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