A Bid for the Sky

carving out a living

Your land is only as productive as you allow it to be, and believe it or not, it does know when you spend time appreciating what it has to offer. You might find yourself zoning out while you walk around your property or do daily chores, thinking about nature and your relationship with it. Taking this time to reflect is important to your unique life as a farmer.

The following is an excerpt from Carving Out a Living on the Land by Emmet Van Driesche. It has been adapted for the web.


Prefer Audio?

Listen to the following excerpt from the audiobook for Carving Out a Living on the Land:


The air is cold enough for my breath to show, but I’m breaking a sweat. I’m harvesting balsam branches, grabbing each with one hand and cutting them with the red clippers in the other. I grasp each new branch with the same hand until my fingers can’t stretch around any more, then shove my arm through the middle of the entire handful and keep going.

I work fast and don’t stop until my arm is completely stacked with branches and sticking straight out, and I look like a kid with too many sweaters on under his jacket. Pivoting on my heel, I stride back to my central pile of balsam boughs and dump the armload on top, eyeballing it to gauge how much the pile weighs. I decide I need more and head off in another direction into the grove.christmas tree

The balsam fir grows from big, wild stumps in thickets that can stretch 20 feet around. The trees crowd so closely together, in no apparent order or pattern, that their branches interlock. Instead of single trees, each stump has up to three small trees of different ages growing off it.

They are pruned as Christmas trees, and I am a Christmas tree farmer.

My Christmas tree farm is unlike any you have ever seen or imagined, however. For one thing, my trees do not march in rows across a field, but rather spring out of the ground in loose affiliations knit together by a lacework of paths. But the biggest difference is that my trees are coppiced, growing out of the top or sides of a stump that has a thick skirt of branches.

These branches keep the stump alive; each year the stump sends out dozens of new shoots, each one vying to be the new tree. Unlike conventional Christmas tree farms, my problem isn’t buying enough seedlings to meet demand ten years down the road, or keeping newly planted stock alive through a summer drought.

My problem is abundance, the sheer exuberance of nature that tries to produce a dozen trees where I want just one. Shoots erupt from the rim of the stump, from the bark on the sides, and from the tops of branches.

Sometimes whole branches start to curve up and make a bid for the sky.


Recommended Reads

Site Repair: Using the Land’s History

Honoring the Cider-Making Process

Read The Book

Carving Out a Living on the Land

Lessons in Resourcefulness and Craft from an Unusual Christmas Tree Farm

$7.00

Enter your email to sign up for our newsletter and save 25% on your next order

Recent Articles

insects on fruit trees

Insects on Fruit Trees: Controlling Pests Organically

How do you control bugs & pests on your fruit trees without using harmful sprays and treatments? Here are some tips for identifying insects on fruit trees and controlling them organically. The following is an excerpt from The Holistic Orchard by Michael Phillips. It has been adapted for the web. Finding Insects On Fruit Trees…

Read More
local rocks & soil

Rock & Grow: Adding Local Rocks & Soil To Your Garden

Looking for ways to naturally enrich your garden? The answer is all around you….literally. Add local rocks & soil to your garden to improve soil health and see your crops flourishing in no time. The following is an excerpt from The Regenerative Grower’s Guide to Garden Amendments by Nigel Palmer. It has been adapted for the…

Read More
garden strawberries

Garden Strawberries — A Sweet and Delicious Ground Cover

Garden strawberries are excellent for both covering the ground and for growing fruit. If you’re planning out a forest garden, or are just looking for a plant to use as ground cover, strawberries are a great option. The following is an excerpt from The Home-Scale Forest Garden by Dani Baker. It has been adapted for…

Read More
asparagus

Asparagus: An Aspiring Spear

Asparagus is a delicious vegetable with a layered history. How did this aspiring spear make its way from growing in the wild to appearing on our plates? The following is an excerpt from the The Seed Detective by Adam Alexander. It has been adapted for the web. “Nature gives us the key to every secret…

Read More

Planting, Transplanting, and Pruning Trees

Interested in growing trees? Here are some tips on successfully planting, transplanting, and pruning trees to create a flourishing forest garden! The following is an excerpt from The Home-Scale Forest Garden by Dani Baker. It has been adapted for the web. Planting Potted Trees and Shrubs If you order potted trees, check with your supplier to…

Read More