With the vacation season quick approaching, the White Home is on the brink of deck the halls.
The annual custom of choosing the proper Christmas tree is held by means of the Nationwide Christmas Tree Contest.
This yr’s honor was bestowed on Cartner’s Christmas Tree Farm in Newland, North Carolina.
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Cartner’s Christmas Tree Farm is family-owned and operated; its grown Fraser firs since 1959.
Sam Cartner, proprietor of Cartner Christmas Tree Farm, instructed Fox Information Digital in an on-camera interview that his farm has competed a number of instances, and that it’s honored to be chosen. (See the video on the high of this text.)
Cartner’s Christmas Tree farm in Newland, North Carolina, was chosen because the place the place the White Home Christmas tree might be chosen from this yr. (Cartner’s Christmas Tree Farm)
“What we’re really excited about is the industry and [about] the Frazier fir being recognized as the top Christmas tree in the nation, and we’re excited to promote the industry and get recognized for our green product that’s totally recyclable – and, [it’s] good for the environment and good for families,” he mentioned.
Since 1966, members of the Nationwide Christmas Tree Affiliation have offered the official White Home Christmas Tree for show within the Blue Room.
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Cartner’s Christmas Tree farm will suggest six to eight timber to be chosen by 4 White Home officers who might be visiting the farm to pick out the ultimate one.
Sam Cartner mentioned the timber should be about 18-19 ft tall and no wider than 12 ft.

Cartner’s Christmas Tree farm will suggest about six to eight timber to be chosen by 4 White Home officers who might be visiting the farm to pick out the ultimate one. (Cartner’s Christmas Tree Farm)
“These are Frazier firs and considered the top Christmas tree species in the nation. Even though it’s slow-growing, it pulls its needles long and its color is the green color and has great fragrance. It’s indigenous to the western North Carolina counties,” he mentioned. “They’re slightly acidic and well-drained, and we get a lot of rainfall and snow and have cold weather.”
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The timber being proposed for the White Home took roughly 25 years to develop.
The farm is run by brothers David, Jim and Sam, who took over the farm from their father, Sam, who served in World Conflict II.

The White Home requires the tree to be about 18-19 ft tall and no wider than 12 ft. (Hum Photos/Common Photos Group through Getty Photos)
“I think one of the main reasons my dad was a pioneer in this business — he was a cultural extension agent here and promoted Christmas trees [as] a better cash crop here in the mountains where it was hard to grow other crops with such a short growing season,” Sam Cartner mentioned.
“And it’s become such a successful industry for being the second major income producer in these western counties behind tourism.”
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He mentioned a very powerful half about selecting out a Christmas tree is the expertise, and he extremely recommends going to a farm the place individuals can select and lower their very own tree.
An important half about selecting out a Christmas tree is the expertise, he mentioned.
“[Farms] try to make it an experience where the family can enjoy food and drinks and music and photos, storytelling,” Sam Cartner mentioned.
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“That’s what I would say is go to someone who’s trying to make it the family experience. I’m sure the trees will be fresh because that’s what they’re striving to do. And look for a tree that’s [a] deep green color and has soft needles,” he added.
Jim Cartner suggested households to ensure they know the place they’re going to put the tree in their home earlier than selecting one out.

The farm could have a send-off “harvest” on Nov. 20 for the group with a fundraiser benefiting households in western North Carolina devastated by latest flooding. (Hum Photos/Common Photos Group through Getty Photos; Cartner’s Christmas Tree Farm)
“[People] kind of forget that maybe their ceiling is not as tall as the tree is at the field, and they get home and, you know, they end up having to alter the size,” Jim Cartner mentioned.
He added, “[It] is a tradition that we like to see families develop, and I think they’ll have a great time picking trees out.”
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The farm could have a send-off “harvest” on Nov. 20 with a fundraiser benefiting households in western North Carolina which were devastated by latest flooding.
Fox Information Digital reached out to the White Home for remark.