Wrangell unites to send Capitol Christmas Tree to Washington, D.C.
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As early voters in the Southeast Alaska community of Wrangell helped choose Alaska’s next U.S. representative, local workers were preparing to send a Sitka spruce to the nation’s Capitol.
In the run-up to the Oct. 26 Harvest Festival celebrating this year’s chosen U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree, everyone was busy inside Wrangell’s state Department of Transportation warehouse, with sounds of a shop vacuum and constant chatter. It was almost like Santa’s workshop — but instead of toys, people tended to a very large tree.
Workers wore hard hats and some people wrapped up the tree, which was harvested from Alaska’s Tongass National Forest, securing it before it headed to Washington, D.C. But it couldn’t leave without a final farewell and blessing in Wrangell.
“It smells like Christmas,” said Chugach National Forest Service employee Brandon Raile, one of the leads for this year’s Capitol Christmas Tree project. “It smells like the only thing missing is the gingerbread cookies. That smell that reminds you of what it’s like to be a little kid at Christmas.”
The tree laid on an 85-foot custom-built trailer that gets used every year to transport each Capitol Christmas Tree.
Wooden walls about six to seven feet tall were lined up against the warehouse. They enclose the tree on its journey across the Lower 48.
‘At night when it’s rolling down the road…’
Raile said Plexiglas will protect the upper half of the tree that lays at the last 20 feet of the trailer. Lights and some of the 14,000 Alaskan made ornaments will decorate that part of the tree.
“At night when it’s rolling down the road, you’ll be able to look in and see the decorated Christmas tree,” he said.
But the 74-foot tree from Zarembo Island, about 20 miles west of Wrangell, would die before the holidays without water.
High school tech club created a misting system to keep tree alive
Because of this and a new project by Wrangell’s High School tech club, T3 Alliance, excavators dug out the tree.
<figure class="alignright size-medium"><figcaption class="wp-element-caption">Wrangell’s T3 Alliance students created the Capitol Christmas Tree watering system to help preserve the tree on it’s 4,000 mile trek to Washington, D.C. From left: Ander Edens, Andrei Bardin-Siekawitch and Anika Herman. (Colette Czarnecki/KSTK)</figcaption></figure>
“We hook a large crane to the top of the tree and we began to excavate the root system,” Tom Roland, one of the 2024 Capitol Christmas Tree team leads, said. “Once the root system was coming loose, we used an excavator in the crane to lift it out of the ground; then we turned it horizontally and we started getting it down on the trailer. It’s a pretty long process. Took a full day to get it positioned on the trailer.”
And then it took another full day to tie the branches down secure enough so they can transport it. But the crew lucked out that weekend – the weather was mostly sunny, which is rare for a Southeast Alaska fall.
‘Why can’t we transplant this tree?’
“One of the questions that we’ve received many times is, ‘Why can’t we transplant this tree?’ And that’s because we had to take the anchor roots out to fit it on the truck,” Roland said. “So while we did get the vast majority of the fine root mass, we weren’t able to save the anchor roots, making this tree impossible to transplant.”
To keep the tree alive for as long as possible, the local high school tech club created a watering system for the tree during transport.
Misters, which look like small polyvinyl chloride or PVC pipes, are set up as a large rectangular cube that encloses the root wad. There’s about 20 mister nozzles on the whole contraption. When turned on, a battery powers the pump to cycle water through the system.
Back in the garage, the workers vacuumed out water from the root area. Then, they reintroduced the 200 gallons of water. Basically a tray on the bottom collects the water as it drips off of the root wad, and then it recycles back through the system with pumps.
<figure class="wp-block-image size-full"><figcaption class="wp-element-caption">National Forest Service employees wrap up the Capitol Christmas Tree on Oct. 22, 2024 in Wrangell. It took three days for the tree to be secured on the trailer that will head to Washington, D.C. (Colette Czarnecki/KSTK)</figcaption></figure>
“This is just so cool to me,” Raile said. “The local school kids were able to have their print on the U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree that’s going to travel the entire country. That’s just so exciting.”
Each side of the truck’s designs represent the Tongass and Chugach National Forests
Raile said the Kenworth truck that will haul the Capitol Christmas Tree is a new vehicle donated by the company each year. Each truck has its own design, like this one that represents the Tongass and Chugach National Forests – one side for each forest. The truck’s blue color is intentional as well because it matches the Alaska flag.
“Come around to the scenes,” Raile said. “These are super exciting because the longer you look at it, the more you see. So all of our iconic wildlife is hidden throughout the scenes.”
The wildlife that’s hidden includes a salmon, fox, eagle, a bear and wolves. But that’s just a few. There’s also formline art on the truck, designed by Wrangellite Mike Aak’wtaatseen Hoyt. It represents the Eagle and the Raven clans, symbolizing unity and balance.
‘…it’s just covered with signatures from across the country.’
The truck will make its way across the Lower 48 on a w