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  2. Here's How the Price of Christmas Trees Has Changed ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/heres-price-christmas-trees-changed...

    Hustle connected with eight Christmas tree farms in five different states and surveyed them to discover that, on average, they sell 6- to 7-foot trees cut, baled, and loaded, for $35 each. After ...

  3. The Real Reasons Some Christmas Trees Cost More Than Others - AOL

    www.aol.com/real-reasons-christmas-trees-cost...

    For example, trees grown in Georgia, Leyland cypresses, cost around $7 a foot whereas Fraser fir trees that have to be cut down, packaged, put on trucks and shipped in, are 42% more expensive at ...

  4. Will Christmas trees be hard to get, expensive this year? - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/christmas-trees-hard-expensive...

    Nov. 20—While Dzen Tree Farm is opening its fields for families to cut and buy Christmas trees this weekend, the farmers there are experiencing something many of their fellow Christmas tree ...

  5. Burl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burl

    Poachers often cut off the burls from the sides of the trunks using chainsaws, which exposes the tree to infection and disease, or fell the entire tree to steal burls higher up. [4] Because of the risk of poaching, Jeff Denny, the state park's redwood coast sector supervisor, encourages those buying burl to inquire where it came from and to ...

  6. Ebony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ebony

    Ebony is a dense black/brown hardwood, coming from several species in the genus Diospyros, which also includes the persimmon tree. A few Diospyros species, such as macassar and mun ebony, are dense enough to sink in water. Ebony is finely textured and has a mirror finish when polished, making it valuable as an ornamental wood. [1]

  7. Dalbergia melanoxylon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalbergia_melanoxylon

    The trees are being harvested at an unsustainable rate, partly because of illegal smuggling of the wood into Kenya, but also because the tree takes upwards of 60 years to mature. African blackwood is often cited as one of the most expensive woods in the world, along with sandalwood, pink ivory, agarwood and ebony. [5] [6]