BM

"B Man"

20/01/2005 9:20 PM

How Lee Valley & Tegs Tools Saved Christmas

The first weekend in December, our little family went out to cut down our
Christmas tree out at Will Tree Farm in Copetown. In short order, my son
picked out a beauty - an 8 foot tall pine that was very thick.

We cut it down and dragged it through the tree shaker and somehow managed to
get this beast into the pickup. That's probably when we first noticed how
heavy this sucker really was - the stump was 8.5 inches across.

We got it home and put it up in the tree stand that we bought from Canadian
tire about 3 years ago - the kind with the extra water container on the
side. While trees always drink a lot of water when you first cut them down,
this a week later this thing was still drinking 2 litres of water a day.
Work was keeping us busy so we hadn't got around to decorating it yet.

That's when my son noticed how sqooshy the run was around the tree. Yup,
the tree stand was leaking. So, off to Canadian Tire to buy a replacement
thinking "thank God we didn't decorate the tree yet". Three days later,
with the new stand in place, we decorated the tree. The next day it began
to lean forward. Reasoning that the bay window behind the tree will be
replaced in the spring with a new one anyhow, I fired a heavy guage hook
into the sil and roped the straight. The tree was so thick, you would never
see the bright yellow nylon rope.

Two days later, my wife called me on my cel in a panic - the new tree stand
was leaking. This is now like two weeks before Christmas and NOBODY had
tree stands - certainly nothing better that what had already failed. My
wife remembered that Lee Valley had a heavy duty one. She phoned the
Burlington store, and while the computer showed none in inventory, the man
on the phone was sure he saw one around there somewhere. So, with 30
minutes before closing time, my wife ran out there to pick up the new tree
stand, and I got some of my buddies at TEGS Tools to come by. Gabe from
TEGS came up with the idea of running a couple of hockey-stick shaped cherry
boards through the center of the tree and picking it straight up, while my
wife removed the broken tree stand and replaced it with the LV model.

What a great tree stand. Not only did it hold that tree firm, but it has
the best adjustment system I've seen for a tree. And watering was finally
made easy - that sucker hold about 3 or 4 litres of water and has a fill
tube & funell.

Thanks for the helpful staff, and the quality merchandise!


Brian


This topic has 1 replies

RL

"Robin Lee"

in reply to "B Man" on 20/01/2005 9:20 PM

21/01/2005 7:52 AM


"B Man" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> The first weekend in December, our little family went out to cut down our
> Christmas tree out at Will Tree Farm in Copetown. In short order, my son
> picked out a beauty - an 8 foot tall pine that was very thick.
>
> We cut it down and dragged it through the tree shaker and somehow managed
to
> get this beast into the pickup. That's probably when we first noticed how
> heavy this sucker really was - the stump was 8.5 inches across.
>
> We got it home and put it up in the tree stand that we bought from
Canadian
> tire about 3 years ago - the kind with the extra water container on the
> side. While trees always drink a lot of water when you first cut them
down,
> this a week later this thing was still drinking 2 litres of water a day.
> Work was keeping us busy so we hadn't got around to decorating it yet.
>
> That's when my son noticed how sqooshy the run was around the tree. Yup,
> the tree stand was leaking. So, off to Canadian Tire to buy a replacement
> thinking "thank God we didn't decorate the tree yet". Three days later,
> with the new stand in place, we decorated the tree. The next day it began
> to lean forward. Reasoning that the bay window behind the tree will be
> replaced in the spring with a new one anyhow, I fired a heavy guage hook
> into the sil and roped the straight. The tree was so thick, you would
never
> see the bright yellow nylon rope.
>
> Two days later, my wife called me on my cel in a panic - the new tree
stand
> was leaking. This is now like two weeks before Christmas and NOBODY had
> tree stands - certainly nothing better that what had already failed. My
> wife remembered that Lee Valley had a heavy duty one. She phoned the
> Burlington store, and while the computer showed none in inventory, the man
> on the phone was sure he saw one around there somewhere. So, with 30
> minutes before closing time, my wife ran out there to pick up the new tree
> stand, and I got some of my buddies at TEGS Tools to come by. Gabe from
> TEGS came up with the idea of running a couple of hockey-stick shaped
cherry
> boards through the center of the tree and picking it straight up, while my
> wife removed the broken tree stand and replaced it with the LV model.
>
> What a great tree stand. Not only did it hold that tree firm, but it has
> the best adjustment system I've seen for a tree. And watering was finally
> made easy - that sucker hold about 3 or 4 litres of water and has a fill
> tube & funell.
>
> Thanks for the helpful staff, and the quality merchandise!
>
>
> Brian

Hi Brian -

Bought one of those stands myself - it's beauty eh?

Made in New Brunswick, I beleive....

Cheers -

Rob


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