Sugar Bear, an 84-Foot White Fir, Selected for US Capitol

Christmas tree at the White house

Christmas tree at the US Capitol building. [Photo from the US Forest Service]

Press release from Six Rivers National Forest:

After a multi-month search covering hundreds of square acres and thousands of feet in elevation, the 2021 U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree from the Six Rivers National Forest has been selected – “Sugar Bear.”

Six candidate trees were identified and presented virtually to Architect of the Capitol staff, with each tree receiving unique nicknames connected to the state animal of California, the bear.

Taking top honors, “Sugar Bear,” an 84-foot white fir located within the Mad River Ranger District, will grace the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol this holiday season.

“Selecting a tree to adorn the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol comes with a unique set of challenges in any given year, but especially with this being the second year the search and selection has been conducted virtually,” said Jim Kaufmann, Director of Capitol Grounds and Arboretum at the Architect of the Capitol. “Thanks to drone footage, comprehensive photos, compelling narration, and detailed notes and measurements, we were able to select a majestic white fir that very well represents the Six Rivers National Forest and the great state of California.”

The People’s Tree will be harvested from the Mad River Ranger District, which was most recently impacted by the largest recorded wildfire in California history – the 2020 August Complex Fire. Nearly 160,000 acres, or a little over 50 percent of the total district, was destroyed and burned by fire associated with the August Complex last year.

“Given the recent challenges and hardships our community faced in 2020, we are honored the People’s Tree will be harvested from our district,” said Kristen Lark, district ranger for the Mad River Ranger District. “This tree signifies the fortitude and resilience of this community and we are excited to share in the joy and hope of this project as it makes its journey to Washington, D.C.”

The tree will be harvested in late October before making its journey throughout the state of California and cross-country to Washington, D.C., arriving at the U.S. Capitol in late November.

The Architect of the Capitol’s team will decorate the tree with thousands of handcrafted ornaments from the people of California. The tree will be lit in early December 2021 by the Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives in as a time-honored tradition in its 51-year partnership with the U.S. Forest Service.

Non-profit project partner Choose Outdoors and a host of partners, sponsors, and volunteers are contributing funding and in-kind support of this project and its theme, “Six Rivers, Many Peoples, One Tree.”

“We could not be more grateful for our shared partnerships and engaged community partners and look forward to representing them on a national stage with the representation of this beautiful, local white fir tree,” said Ted O. McArthur, forest supervisor for the Six Rivers National Forest.

 

About the U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree

The U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree initiative is a 50-year tradition in which one of our 155 national forests provides a tree for the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol for the holiday season. The project is made possible with support from partners including non-profit Choose Outdoors along with cash and in-kind contributions from companies large and small as well as volunteers locally and across America.

Partners supporting the 2021 journey include Kenworth Truck Company, System Transport, ABC Sacramento, Spireon, Inc., Hale Truck and Trailer, Visit California, PG&E, Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, Alaska Airlines, Coast Central Credit Union, Great West Casualty Company, Truckload Carriers Association, Meritor, Inc., Mountain F. Enterprises, Inc., Society of American Foresters, Green Diamond, Mendocino and Humboldt Redwood Company, Sierra Pacific Industries, BT Metals, LexisNexis VitalChek Network, Inc., Bergco, The Forest Foundation, National Press Club, Humboldt Craft Spirits, Humboldt Marketplace, Bass Pro Shops, Chicobag, and more.

We invite you to follow the #USCapitolChristmasTree2021 project through one of our accounts:

  • Facebook: USCapitolChristmasTree
  • Twitter: @USCapitolTree
  • Instagram: @USCapitolChristmasTree
  • #ManyPeoplesOneTree

To learn more about the history of the U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree, please visit https://www.aoc.gov/what-we-do/programs-ceremonies/capitol-christmas-tree.  Follow along at www.uscapitolchristmastree.com.

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29 Comments
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North west
Guest
North west
2 years ago

Those are some brittle branches to be falling and hauling that far.

cutomorrow
Guest
cutomorrow
2 years ago
Reply to  North west

wrapped with care to ensure all arrives in one piece.

I like stars
Guest
I like stars
2 years ago

This from folks who want to preach to us about a “global climate emergency”.

This project will have a carbon footprint greater than 7 flatulent cattle.

Trashman
Guest
Trashman
2 years ago

Put a sitter in it.

I like stars
Guest
I like stars
2 years ago
Reply to  Trashman

That would be pretty funny. “Save Sugar Bear!”

Once it arrives, The Big Guy will probably have the top 10% lopped off and delivered to his personal quarters.

Martin
Guest
Martin
2 years ago

I would prefer that the government buy a giant fake Christmas tree. They could stash it in the Capitol building I am sure. Lots of big empty rooms, or have the maker recycle it and make a new tree for the following Christmas. Hoo, Hoo, Ha!

Bug on a Windshield
Guest
Bug on a Windshield
2 years ago
Reply to  Martin

“Selecting a tree to adorn the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol . . . ”

Or, better yet, why not just plant one on the west lawn?

I like stars
Guest
I like stars
2 years ago

By far the best idea if there is to be an official tree. Sequester carbon, don’t spew it. It would be cool to me to see it grow.

Bug on a Windshield
Guest
Bug on a Windshield
2 years ago
Reply to  I like stars

Yea. Just think how majestic the tree would be by now if one was planted when that building was built.

Northern Forests
Guest
Northern Forests
2 years ago

I agree, but They already tried that and the tree ended up dying.

Z
Guest
Z
2 years ago

BUG, YES!! PLANT A DANG TREE!! The time, resources, money, ego wasted on a symbolic gesture is ridiculous. Plant a tree from each state if egos are at stake! Sequester that carbon!
Better yet, spend the money feeding poor American children!

Martin
Guest
Martin
2 years ago

Agreed, or they could replant the once beautiful rose garden for Christmas.

Farce
Guest
Farce
2 years ago

“To represent the resiliency of the people here” they will cut it down, transport it 3000 miles and then use it to signal the fake birthday of Jesus. The holiday begun and enforced by torture and genocide by a church that stole children from their parents for re-education and protected it’s priests who molested and raped children. What a wonderful thing!! Yes- plant a tree you friggin’ morons! Adorn it with treats for the birds and wildlife. Complete the circle of nature- of which we are only a part. Celebrate real life- not this death culture from the dark forces of the church and Washington DC

Jake
Guest
Jake
2 years ago
Reply to  Farce

Once again, Farce hits the nail on the head!

cutomorrow
Guest
cutomorrow
2 years ago
Reply to  Farce

well that’s one way to look at it, although dark. More than one practicing religion celebrates this season. Blame them all ?

onrust
Guest
onrust
2 years ago
Reply to  Farce

Farce tells the truth. What a courageous guy. Most of us want to hear anything but the truth.

Angela Robinson
Guest
Angela Robinson
2 years ago
Reply to  Farce

While I take your point, the Catholic Church was not a fan of the Christmas tree. One wasn’t put up in the Vatican until 1982.

I think that it has much deeper roots, pre-Christian, in one form or another. Yule and all that. Bringing green things into the home during the darkest, bleakest part of the year. To this day, holly, ivy, mistletoe, and conifers harken back to that ancient time.

Which wasn’t all that peaceful either. Human sacrifice may have played a part.

Still it does amuse me that the Church appropriated an ancient soltstice/midwinter holiday. Also, when some misguided Christian complains about taking the Christ out of Christians while putting up trees and greens and all kinds of shiny objects.

Me? My home looks like some “Christmas spirit” came in and threw up every green, tree, and shiny object possible. And I keep it up until Candlemas (Feb 2), because if my family wants all this stuff and it takes hours to do, I’m not taking it down until I absolutely have to. I would love to not even put it up until Christmas Eve, as is “correct”, but the family gets a little whiny if I don’t put it up by the 15th.

My husband came to appreciate my style after first thinking I was just being weird. Coming home after days crabbing on the ocean to a warm, twinkling home in January, our bleakest month, grew on him. If I knew he was coming home in the middle of the night, I’d leave the tree lights on for him.

My lectures about the commercialization of Christmas and the flipping on it’s head in the timeline (commercialization) so that Christmas ends on the day it (and the 12 days of Christmas) actually begins fall on slightly deaf ears. Oh, and that Advent was once kind of like Lent.

Anyway, I like Christmas/Yule/Mid-winter, what ever you want to call it. Food, family, friends, and fairy lights. 🙂

Dave Kirby
Guest
Dave Kirby
2 years ago
Reply to  Farce

F…You need to do some serious research. The Christmas tree was originally a pagan symbol. It is thought that Luther was the first to adorn a tree with lit candles so it is hardly a Catholic creation. More a German Protestant symbol.

DELLIB
Guest
DELLIB
2 years ago

What part of the current administration celebrates Christmas anyway? I thought they were all atheist satanic worshipers who sacrifice and drink the blood of the young at secret society meetings! The secret society and the builderburg members deny god and religion!

Bug on a Windshield
Guest
Bug on a Windshield
2 years ago
Reply to  DELLIB

Atheists do not believe in Satan.

cutomorrow
Guest
cutomorrow
2 years ago

wonderful ! we’re being represented for the holidays

North west
Guest
North west
2 years ago

Oh my goodness Farce⚡️

E
Guest
E
2 years ago

Nice article.

Country Bumpkin
Guest
Country Bumpkin
2 years ago

Why am I not surprised that our systemically racist government picked a WHITE fir instead of honoring a more marginalized conifer.
Blue Spruce Matter.

Angela Robinson
Guest
Angela Robinson
2 years ago

Well, “white fir” is better than “piss fir”.***

***I may have confused my firs, but I’m pretty sure I’m correct. Happy to be corrected.

Bug on a Windshield
Guest
Bug on a Windshield
2 years ago

Angela, that’s what I smell, er, uh, call it.

Country Bumpkin, all conifers matter:
China Fir
European Black Pine
Japanese Thuja
Mountain Pine (for the Rednecks, in reference to another recent thread)
Redwood
Scots Pine
Silver Fir
Swiss Pine
Yellow Pine
and even, Ghost Pine

Guest
Guest
Guest
2 years ago

Is white fir the same thing as hemlock fir?

local observer
Guest
local observer
2 years ago

There are approximately 25-30 million Real Christmas Trees sold in the U.S. every year. another fact is that white fir stores more water content than other firs and will likely make the trip verse the doug fir. another fact is that trump’s golden idol will never be forgotten in history and this tree will never make history similar to the other 50 trees shipped to the Capitol for the holidays.

thetallone
Guest
thetallone
2 years ago

If you believe in God, it is disrespectful of Her creation to unnecessarily kill for one’s amusement or pleasure. If you don’t believe, it’s still just plain stupid.