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Short supplies, high prices expected for B.C. Christmas trees this holiday season

Wildfires and heat waves have taken toll on supply and cost of Christmas trees
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Santa poses in front of Christmas trees in 2021. This year, Happy Holidays Christmas Tree Co. will open Nov. 27 at the Luxton Fairgrounds. (Courtesy of Happy Holidays Christmas Tree Co.)

Christmas tree lots are reporting supply shortages and higher prices this holiday season.

People looking for live Christmas trees should start shopping sooner, according to a press release from Evergrow, a Fraser Valley company that delivers potted trees and then replants them after the holidays.

鈥淲e鈥檙e talking to farmers who are telling us over a third of their trees for the season are damaged so badly they can鈥檛 sell them,鈥 said Evergrow CEO Paige Wheaton. 鈥淢any farms are planning to open for only one or two weekends in November because they know they will be sold out by then.鈥

Joan Fleming said that while her Vancouver Island farm, Saanichton Christmas Tree Farm, has plenty of supply, many tree lots that import trees rather than grow them are struggling to meet demand.

鈥淎 lot of wholesale lots, they鈥檙e having a hard time getting trees because there is a shortage because of that heat dome and those trees got scorched, whereas luckily, mine didn鈥檛,鈥 Fleming said.

Happy Holidays Christmas Tree Co., a pop-up holiday shop in Langford that sells trees and other gifts, said the two B.C. tree farms they have worked with have had some setbacks as well.

While extreme heat is partly to blame, Debbie Stroshein the owner of Happy Holidays Christmas Tree Co., said there are many reasons for low inventory and high prices, including fewer local farmers.

鈥淢ore and more of the tree farmers are retiring with no longevity plan,鈥 Stroshein said. 鈥淭wo large producers I鈥檝e worked with in the last five years have closed or drastically reduced inventory. I am seeing more and more trees grown in the U.S.A. showing up on racks here.鈥

Stroshein said that the cost of getting trees to Victoria has also doubled in the past two years, which is contributing to the spike in prices for consumers.

For previous seasons, Stronshein said she was able to source locally, but with shifting dynamics in the industry such as older farmers retiring and U.S. markets buying Canadian, she鈥檚 had to import some of her trees from other places.

According to the press release, farm owners and experts are citing 2021 as one of the worst growing years since the 鈥80s, but Kelly Chashai from Metchosin鈥檚 Down to Earth Nursery said today鈥檚 tree supply is still being impacted by wildfires from years ago.

鈥淓ven though the fires weren鈥檛 so bad this year, that did have a big effect as trees take about seven to 10 years to grow before they are cut,鈥 Chashai said. 鈥淪o the events of five years ago and three years ago are really impacting today.鈥

Most of the trees that Down to Earth Nursery is selling this season come from the Fraser Valley and across B.C., and they are not having issues keeping up with demand. However, for smaller and less established Christmas tree lots, keeping prices low during inflation and maintaining supply is a struggle that Stroshein anticipates being around for a while.

鈥淚t鈥檚 changing,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 not sure what that future looks like for a lot of small businesses. Some really small ones I know of have disappeared altogether.鈥

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