
Your Old Christmas Tree Could Save Wildlife This Winter
Once Christmas has passed, many live trees are quickly hauled to the curb or dropped off for recycling. While recycling is certainly better than sending a tree to the landfill, there is another option that can make an immediate and meaningful difference. Leaving your live Christmas tree in your backyard for part of the winter can provide critical shelter for wildlife during the coldest months of the year.
Why Winter Is The Hardest Season For Wildlife
This is something that, honestly, had never occurred to me as an option. Still, according to a recommendation shared by the Home and Garden Tip’s Facebook page, a discarded Christmas tree can become a winter survival shelter for birds and small animals.
How Christmas Trees Provide Shelter And Warmth
The dense evergreen branches of your holiday tree can block wind and snow, providing ground-level protection for species like juncos, sparrows, towhees, rabbits, and chipmunks. The needles also help trap warmth. Temperatures inside the branches can be noticeably warmer than the surrounding air, which matters during January cold snaps.

Why Dense Branches Help Protect Against Predators
Predators are another major threat during winter. Hawks and other birds of prey have a harder time spotting ground-feeding birds when thick branches provide visual cover. In deep snow, access to protected feeding areas can mean the difference between survival and starvation.
How Many Trees Are Discarded During Peak Winter Cold
The numbers are sobering. An estimated 25 to 30 million real Christmas trees are sold in the United States each year, and the majority are discarded by early January. That timing coincides with the most dangerous stretch of winter for wildlife. Leaving just one tree in a yard can offer shelter to dozens of birds during the harshest weeks.
Read More: Easy Ways to Recycle Your Holiday Tree
How To Turn Your Tree Into A Backyard Wildlife Shelter
Using your tree this way is really very simple. Lay it horizontally in a corner of your yard with the needles facing down, or lean it against a fence to create an A-frame style shelter. You can also combine it with other branches to form a brush pile. Hanging suet or seed feeders from the branches turns it into an instant feeding station, and weighting the tree helps keep it in place during storms.
Once spring arrives and wildlife no longer needs the cover, the tree can still be recycled or chipped for garden mulch. Municipal recycling programs remain a good option, but letting your tree work a little longer in your own yard offers immediate benefits when animals need it most.
Animals You Might Encounter in The Wild in Indiana
Gallery Credit: Kat Mykals
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