A typical 6ft. Christmas Tree will have taken 8 or 9 years to grow to the size that you want to buy. Until it is harvested it will have been growing alongside many thousands of its kind in a place that suits it very well. When Christmas Trees are harvested they are sometimes cut at ground level and sometimes physically pulled up, roots and all.
However the trees that you are making your choice from have ended up at the retailer, you can be sure in the majority of cases that, unless they state otherwise, they were all harvested several weeks ago, and not this morning.
That being the case, there are a few things that you can do to try to increase the ‘shelf-life’ of your tree so that it reaches Twelfth Night still looking something like it did when you chose it. If you have looked at our blog about Conifers, you will know that Evergreen Plants continue to transpire because they still have leaves or needles. The influences that most dramatically effect plant transpiration rates are air temperature and available light. So apart from having had their root system cut off and therefore losing their access to water, they also have to deal with suddenly warmer surroundings and the increase in both light intensity and longevity. Is it any wonder therefore that there is a tendency for them to go into a decline ?