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Smelly

While growing up in Hawaii had distinct advantages, fresh and affordable Christmas trees were not numbered among those perks. When I was especially wee, my parents bought small, rather scrawny trees from the parking lot of Foodland; unfortunately, I was so young that they had to place the precious evergreen in the playpen for its own protection. By the time I was in grade school, however, my dad had decided that his allergies could no longer endure a month of expensive agony and we bought a surprisingly furry artificial tree. My parents told us that its shaggy appearance had to do with its attempt to approximate a Canadian Pine.

Whatever.

My mom, however, continued to harbor a deep and persistent love of the smell of evergreens. Every year, she and I would go on a special “smelling” date. After completing a grocery shopping excursion, we would detour into the temporary tents set up in the market parking lot. We would watch the men spray the foamy fake “snow” onto trees at customers’ requests, marvel at the amazing shrinkage which occurred during the tree-netting process, and, then, burrow our noses into the spicy, woodsy branches. Having secured our Christmas smelling fix, we could proceed with the rest of the holiday season.

So imagine my utter delight when, during our year of dating, I realized that Noel — who sometimes seems to be allergic to most airborne plant matter — was not allergic to Christmas trees. Sweet joy indeed. In anticipation of our third Christmas together, we brought our chosen conifer home today, lugged the Christmas boxes up from the basement, and sipped Noel’s amazing peppermint hot chocolate while we decked the tree, primarily with Noel’s extensive collection of childhood ornaments.

There is something about setting up our own little Christmas tree, tucked into the corner of our dining room, that asserts our family-ness. And there is something about being able to smell a Christmas tree every day, rather than just in the parking lot of Foodland, that is a strange but delightful perk to being an adult on the mainland.

3 Comments »

  1. Suzanne said:

    on November 26, 2007 at 6:44 am

    i love the treetop:)

    the tree looks beautiful! yippee for holidays!!

  2. elissa said:

    on November 26, 2007 at 3:37 pm

    thanks. it’s actually an elf cap that came on a bottle of bailey’s last christmas. ;)

  3. Lee said:

    on December 6, 2007 at 12:49 pm

    congrats on an outstanding tree!

    i worked at a christmas tree farm every december for 9 years.

    if you have a chance next year, track down a red cedar. i think you’d love the spicy, heady bouquet this redwood provides. while it pairs well with hot chocolate, i highly recommend pairing the olfactory experience with salmon. yum.

    or, if you’re in the mood for something evoking christmas of years gone by, i might try to find a blue spruce. not as sharp as the cedar, and a little more earthy/woodsey. excellent with gingerbread.

    finally, if you would like to recreate the festivities of your early youth, ask your mom to snap a photo of the real trees available on the island. odds are i might be able to ID said tree, and at least recommend an approximation available in the great midwest. maybe it will bring back memories of your first watercolor set?

    this was a break from putting stickers in footwear workbooks. thanks!

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