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When Sam Cartner and a few others set out their first
Christmas tree seedlings in 1959, more than one of their
farming neighbors thought they were crazy. Now, forty
years later, they have realized that Cartner was crazy
like a fox, and many of them have gone into the business
themselves.
Cartner runs the Cartner Christmas Tree Farm on Spanish
Oak Road in Newland, but the enterprise is so large that
he cant do it alone. His three sons and wife still
help in the business, along with between eight and seventeen
workers, depending on the season.
The family has four different tracts of trees, slowly
expanding the operation over the years. Cartner estimates
he has about 300 acres of trees now, but early on, it
was slow going. We had a lot of visitors. It was
new to the university (North Carolina State, which operates
the Cooperative Extension Service), and they didnt
want to push something that would fall on a bad deal.
There were some trees moving in 69, 70, along
through there, and people started saying, Well,
you can sell those things.
In the mid-70s, more people got interested in the
business after seeing the success of the tree pioneers.
It was something new, Cartner says.
itss like putting your pants on. If
youre used to putting your left leg in first, you
dont want to stumble and put your right one in first.
Thats the way people were about trying something
new.
This year the farm will ship to Minnesota, Texas, Missouri,
Colorado, Louisiana, Alabama and other markets. They dont
ship to local markets and work with a Winston-Salem-based
distributor to get the trees across the country.
Cartner was one of the few earlly supporter of the industry.
I was county agent and organize the North Carolina
Christmas Tree Growers in August of 1959, he recalls.
We still have two who signed the original document,
Hernia Dellinger of Crossnore and Conner Weathermam from
down in Ingalls. Thats the only ones from Avery
County that are still living. There was just handful of
us."
That first group was small, but were lookin toward the
future. There probably werent more than ten
or fifteen people who were beginning to think.
In other words, it was a new idea, and people just couldnt
conceive of growing treess to sell, so we had a struggle. The
first trees that we shipped out went mostly to Rotary
Clubs and Churches. We cut and loaded mostly sevens
to eights (footers) for three dollars and a half.
This area had been a vegetable-
producing area, cabbage and beans primarily, he
says. Of course, some people had beef cattle. Those
were the primary money crops, and it was just so uncertain.
If you hit, you hit, and if you missed, you missed.
Cartner says there were very few options for farmers
in those days, and getting money from their land was looking
harder and harder to do. We were just looking for
something so we could use this steep, rough land to give
people an extra source of income. Our first planting,
we planted every species we could find. We planted both
Norway and Siberian spruce, white pine, Scotch pine.
After the first rotation, after six or seven years
of growing, we decided I fwe were going to stay in the
tree business, we were going to have to work with nature.
And nature put Fraser fir on a roll in these high mountains.
So we gradually eliminated all the others. We only have
two spruce trees left on this farm.
Cartner says that while the wholesale cost of trees has
increased, so has all the costs, particularly labor. Other
trends have emerged as well. It takes about thirty-three
million cut Christmas trees of all species to furnish
all the market, he says. Weve gotten
about fifteen to seventeen percent of that market now,
when you talk about the Fraser firs that are cut from
Virginia down to Georgia across the mountains. We hope
we can get twenty-five percent of the market. We dont
want it all, because we couldnt produce it. Its
the land area thats the limiting factor.
The Cartners work year-round in the trees, with eight
full-time employees; They grow the seedlings from plugs,
then plant them in the fields after two years. The trees
are replaced with seedlings as they are cut. Unlike many
growers, the Cartners are more selective in their cutting,
taking trees that are the sizes demanded by the marketing
while leaving others to grow a little more.
Still, the late fall-early winter period is when the
real work begins. As the days grow shorter, Christmas
tree workers see their days grow longer. This is
the push time, because the window of getting rid of them
is about five weeks, says Cartner. When you
struggle for ten years to grow a tree, and youre
ready to sell, and youve got five weeks to move
it in, you dont mess around much,
The farm will be open for choose-and cut, and Cartner
handles mail order trees as well, though that has its
own special challenges. When you get one out of
the field up here, and you ship to somewhere like New
York, and theyve got their mind made that maybe
its a little bit different, thats what youre
faced with. But its done fairly well for us.
The Cartners will ship about 25,000 trees this year,
of varying sizes. The cost versus return doesnt
pay off for larger trees, so Cartner says that many growers
dont like to fool with them. They have to grow for
many years, taking the time and space that two or three
smaller trees could use. Ive got trees down
There on the shipping lot that are over twenty years old,
he says. When you keeps. tree that long, and maintain
it, and keep the insects off of it, theres no way
you can make any money off of it. The trade wont
handle it.
Cartner advises that this years shoppers might
be faced with shortages in several size areas of trees,
particularly the six-and-sevens and the over-nine footers.
The Cartners tree farm is between 3,500 and 4,500
feet in elevation. His sons are all successful in other
professions, but take time off in the shipping season
to help out the family business. Cartners sons include
a professor, a lawyer, and a veterinarian. Thats
proof enough that it doesnt necessarily take brains
to be a Christmastree farmer, but it does if youre
going to be successful. And it helps to have a little
foresight. Sam Cartner has both.
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