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What do we do with our Christmas tree?

Twelfth Night is the traditional time for taking down Christmas trees, cards and decorations

What do we do with our Christmas tree?
On the eighth day of Christmas

Rother District Council has issued advice to householders for the disposal of now redundant Christmas trees:

East Sussex County Council adds further advice on its website:

If you still opt for the real deal when it comes to Christmas trees, they can be recycled and turned into chippings for parks. You can find drop off points locally or, if chopped up into manageable pieces, you can recycle them via kerbside garden waste schemes. Alternatively, you can take them to your tip (household waste recycling centre). Or, if you have the outside space and your tree has survived the central heating, you can try replanting your tree and using it again next year!

Yet another suggestion comes from Hastings Borough Council:

When the festivities are over and it’s time to take down your Christmas tree, you can recycle it for free. Take your tree to Harmers Lane, Alexandra Park, between 8:30am and 4pm from now until 17 January. Councillor Maya Evans, lead councillor for environment, said: “We have offered this free recycling service to residents for several years. We turn the trees into healthy, compostable material that can be used in the park, and it helps keep own town tidy too. Please make sure all decorations are removed before trees are left."

The owner of the tree in our picture had obviously made an early decision. On the eighth day of Christmas, the tree appeared to have already dried out and be shedding its needles, so it had to be taken out of the house.

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