As 2020 kills traditions, Christmas stands strong

NEW ALEXANDRIA, Pennsylvania — If you’re not paying close attention, you can easily miss the dirt road that leads to the Flemings Christmas tree farm just off U.S. Route 22 in western Pennsylvania. The sign for the turnoff from the two-lane highway is covered in fresh snow, and within just a few feet along the narrow road, you enter a winter wonderland that curves along a steep mountain ridge.

The scene soon becomes majestic as you find yourself surrounded in all directions by tree-filled Laurel Mountains that make up this nearly century-old farm. At the very base of the ridge is a pristine pond reflecting the mountains and the snow.

New Alexandria, Pa. - Shawn Lyman, 58, of Creekside, Pa. shapes up a tree at Flemings Tree Farm, where he has worked since he moved to Pennsylvania at 17.jpeg
Shawn Lyman, 48, of Creekside, Pa., shapes up a tree at Flemings Tree Farm, where he has worked since he moved to Pennsylvania at 17.

To the right is a quaint cabin, and the scent of a fresh fire from seasoned pine pours out of its stone smokestack. It is decorated with red-ribboned wreaths and filled with Christmas trinkets. To the left, a red tractor sits along the ridge, Christmas trees piled in the back. The scene looks like it was drawn from an ancient Currier and Ives postcard, drawing you in with a much needed aura of nostalgia.

There is so much we have lost in the year of the pandemic: the lives of loved ones, jobs, multigenerational family businesses that have survived devastating depressions and wars only to fall to forced closures, the intimacy of conversations, hand-holding, and even that pure jolt of connection that comes from the simple hug.

We’ve also lost that very important sense of anticipation and all the emotions and expectations that go along with it: the end of the school year, the beginning of summer, family vacation, summer festivals, the beginning of school, the start of football season, figuring out what you or your children will be for Halloween, and the expectancy of seeing family and friends over Thanksgiving and Christmas celebrations and all of the foods and smells and traditions that go along with all of these events.

We are all in some way looking for something that draws us together, even if it is only a handful of family members. Coming to Flemings has a really wonderful way of giving us a glimpse back of our former lives.

On weekends, there are hayrides and hot chocolate, and Santa sits outside to greet the young and the not-so-young as they head up the mountains to pick and cut their own tree.

“There’s Fraser, Canaan, Douglas, Concolor. Those are all of the fir trees. Then there’s white pine, Scotch pine, Norway spruce, and Colorado spruce,” explained Preston Fleming, who owns the tree farm.

Fleming, 32, bought the farm from his great uncle this year, a place he has worked at since he was 14 years old. “I worked almost exclusively at the Indiana location. When he decided to sell both, I bought this one. We opened for the first time last weekend, and wow, were we ever busy?” he said with a broad smile.

Fleming said people are more eager than ever to cut their own tree down this year because they have lost so many other traditions. “There is this sense this year to do something that continues a lost tradition or start a new one, even something as simple as cutting down a tree. If you can do it with your kids or other family members, you have found something new to start or bring back a lost memory,” he said.

It also brings back anticipation — you see it in the eyes of the children and parents as they come around the bend in the road in their cars, you can see it as they head into the hills to pick their trees, and you can see it as their trees, ones they have worked hard to choose and cut, are tied up on the top of their cars or thrown in the back of their pickup trucks.

At the turn of the 20th century, most people cut their trees in nearby forests. By the 1920s, people began buying trees that were grown on farms, a tradition that helped farmers extend their crop season beyond October pumpkins.

Over 50 million seedlings are planted every year by tree farmers, explained Fleming. “It takes a good eight years and a lot of tender care to get a mature tree. There used to be a lot of Christmas tree farms around here. Most of those farmers, though, have given up the crop. Not me. I planted on hundreds of acres,” he said.

According to data compiled by Hobby Farms, there are nearly 15,000 farms growing Christmas trees in the United States, employing more than 100,000 people in the industry. The top-producing states include Pennsylvania, as well as Oregon, Michigan, Wisconsin, and North Carolina.

Shawn Lyman is one of those workers. In fact, he has worked for Flemings since he was 17 years old. By the end of the month, he will turn 49. “I went to California for a bit in between, but I wanted to come back. I love working here. You get a sense of family not just from your coworkers but from seeing the same families coming back every year.”

New Alexandria, Pa. - (Left to Right) Shawn Lyman, Michael Highducheck, and Preston Fleming stand before Flemings Tree Farm.jpeg
Shawn Lyman, Michael Highducheck, and Preston Fleming.

Lyman, of Creekside, and another longtime employee, Michael Highducheck, of Shelocta, were busy running the ancient red tree baler — the motor hummed as they carefully fed the trees through. “A lot of my employees are seasonal. They just come help do the tree work, but most of these guys worked for Flemings for years. My one guy worked there for probably 25 years, and another guy’s worked there for almost 40 years,” he explained.

“During the summer, you get in the field, and it’s fun. You’re always out in the middle of nowhere in the middle of the fields. There is a lot of work that goes into caring for the trees, tractor work, mowing, shearing, keeping the weeds out of the way, making sure they are hydrated,” Fleming explained.

Last year, his uncle didn’t open this farm. Fleming put a lot of work into opening up this year, but he didn’t know what to expect when he placed the sign up along the hill on the highway two weeks ago announcing they were back. “I had no idea how much we really meant to people until last Friday, until the cars started coming around the ridge. A lot of new customers, too. People are looking for something good, some joy. I think we provided that,” he said, then he paused to consider what that meant.

“It’s a pretty good feeling.”

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