Halifax's Christmas tree lots busier, earlier this year | Shoptalk | Halifax, Nova Scotia | THE COAST

Halifax's Christmas tree lots busier, earlier this year

With people spending more time at home due to Covid, the holiday spirit arrived early in 2020.

click to enlarge Halifax's Christmas tree lots busier, earlier this year
Harrington's Tree Lot (Instagram)
Chris Harrington's father and his two sons are also involved in the tree farm.
Harrington’s Tree lot has been selling Christmas trees for more than two decades at the bottom of Kearney Lake Road where it meets the Bedford Highway.

“It’s a three-generation business here, and we’ve been here for 25 years,” says Chris Harrington, son of Keith and Marie Harrington, who started the lot in the 1990s.

Typically, the lot would open on or around December 1. But this year, when it opened on November 28, people were already raring to go. “Even when we’re opening then, people were kind of saying ‘jeez you’re opening late,’” says Harrington in a phone call with The Coast.

The tree lot owner thinks because people are home more due to Covid, they maybe have “nothing else to do” and try to brighten their days with some holiday cheer. “Something they can do, they can bring the tree and enjoy it longer,” he says.

Because of the impacts of Covid, Harrington also suspects there are fewer tree lots open in HRM this year.

“Maybe some decided not to come in from the country due to the uncertainty of Covid,” he says. “Cases have gone down and we’re going in the right direction but if that got worse, those guys cut all their trees, they come to the city and then we get shut down.”

Harrington’s, thankfully, is spared from that. Although their trees come from Digby, commercial travel is not impacted, and Chris Harrington lives just down the road from the sales lot.

As for employees, he relies on family for that as well. “My sons are 19 and 22,” he says. “So between them and their high school or college buddies, lots of friends and family for staff here.”

Currently, Harrington’s lot is limited to five families of five at a time. They also offer contract-free delivery, which has been more popular than ever this year.

“There’s been families that their son or daughter has come home from school in Toronto and they’re in quarantine for two weeks,” Harrington says. “We drop their tree off, they e-transfer the money and they don’t have to leave the house. And then it gives them something to do while they’re in quarantine.”

Covid means new ritual for Harrington's—the staff frequently disinfect surfaces, have one-way aisles, enforce mask-wearing (yes, even outside) and have Plexiglas at pay stations—but it hasn't put a damper on business.

“We’ve had ten months to learn about all of that stuff, we’ve been living with Covid for so long now, that stuff was easy,” says Harrington.

But the main anxiety for him and other tree lot owners is the talk of a “tree shortage” due to increased shipping across the US border. “There is a very high demand. My goal is that everybody, 95 percent of people who need a tree will get a tree. That other five percent that think they can wait till the 20th to go get a tree, they haven’t been watching the news,” he says.

Harrington says the lot will try to stay open as long as possible, but for now can only promise as far ahead as the weekend of December 12 and 13.

“I’m constantly still on the phone trying to see if I can find a few more trees to stay open. I hate to say when we’re going to close cause it creates some anxiety with people,” he says. “But when we know we’re getting near the end we’ll make an announcement and give people an opportunity to come get their tree.”

Ten tree lots in HRM that haven’t been picked over (yet)

Harrington’s Tree Lot, 1 Dakin Drive, off Kearney Lake Road, Mon-Fri 10am to 8pm, Sat-Sun 9am to 7pm. (902) 471-4495
Open until at least Dec. 13.

Seaforth Country Store, 6344 Highway 207, Musquodoboit, Mon-Fri 10am to 8pm, Sat-Sun 9am to 8pm, (902) 827-2118
$18 a tree, up to 8 feet tall. Their most recent shipment of 100 trees arrived on December 8 and is expected to sell out quickly.

“Tree Man” (Duncan and Denise Walker), Golden Age Centre, 212 Herring Cove Road, Spryfield, 902-275-8212

Bedford Lion’s Club, 36 Holland Avenue, Bedford, opens 11am daily,
(902) 835-0862
With limited trees left, they might sell out as early as Friday December 11.

Northern Lights Christmas Tree Farm, 3200 Clam Harbour Road,
Fri/Sat/Sun only, 9am to 4pm until Dec 20, 902-641-2142


Timberlea Beverage Room, 1820 Saint Margarets Bay Road,
(902) 876-1145. Opened this year on December 4.

2nd Beaverbank Scout Troop, 454 Beaverbank Road. Final days are Dec. 12, 13 and 19. Open 10am to 4pm.
Cost is per $25 per tree any size, or $23 with a food bank donation

Van't Hof's3 locations, open 9am-9pm 7 days a week, cash only
Sobeys Panavista Drive (expected to sell out Dec 9.)
Pleasant Street Dartmouth beside Woodside Tavern
225 Cobequid Road

Conrad's (Gary and Pam Conrad), 1075 Barrington Street (Superstore parking lot)

Maplewood Maple Syrup & Christmas Tree Farm, 3601 Joseph Howe Drive, (Superstore parking lot), (902) 644-3358
Rex & Bonnie Veinot

Cancelled or Sold Out

Naugler’s Farm, Halifax Forum – cancelled this year due to Covid

Walker’s Feed, Cole Harbour - sold out

Carl’s Christmas Trees, Woodlawn Road – sold out

Alderney Market - sold out

Bethany United Church (beside Armdale Roundabout) - sold out

Victoria Walton

Victoria was a full-time reporter with The Coast from April 2020 until mid-2022, when the CBC lured her away. During her Coast tenure, she covering everything from COVID-19 to small business to politics and social justice. Originally from the Annapolis Valley, she graduated from the University of King’s College...
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