A new East Coast tradition: Towering Christmas trees made of lobster traps
HALIFAX — They first started appearing along Canada’s East Coast about 10 years ago: towering Christmas trees fashioned out of carefully stacked lobster traps.
Adorned with colourful buoys, twinkling lights and evergreen boughs, they are becoming regular fixtures in fishing communities across Atlantic Canada.
“They are popping up everywhere,” says Suzy Atwood, tourism development officer for Barrington, N.S., which assembled one of the region’s first trap trees in 2009.
“It speaks to the importance (of lobster fishing) to our economy … It’s the backbone of our community.”