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Will you be having a Christmas Tree this year??

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Posts

  • josusa47josusa47 Posts: 3,530
    No. I don’t anyway.
    pansyface said:
    No don’t go under the table, buttercup. A lot of dust down there, at least in this house.😁


    My house needs a cat like that.  
  • Busy-LizzieBusy-Lizzie Posts: 24,043
    No. Not this year.
    So does mine 
    Dordogne and Norfolk. Clay in Dordogne, sandy in Norfolk.
  • Long haired cats are even more efficient...
    Since 2019 I've lived in east Clare, in the west of Ireland.
  • JennyJJennyJ Posts: 10,576
    Maybe/possibly/probably.
    We'll probably put the decorations up, but food will be scaled back if we aren't allowed visitors to stay (no-one is close enough to just come for a meal). OH will insist on a turkey but he likes the leftovers, so that's OK.
    Doncaster, South Yorkshire. Soil type: sandy, well-drained
  • YviestevieYviestevie Posts: 7,066
    Maybe/possibly/probably.
    Not sure at the moment.  One day I say I will, the next I wont.  Usually go all out with decs but I'm not sure I can summon up the energy to get all the stuff out of the cellar.
    Hi from Kingswinford in the West Midlands
  • tui34tui34 Posts: 3,493
    No. Not this year.
    No, not this year but we will have a special meal and hopefully, if we are allowed, a walk along the beach in the afternoon.  Come home, light the fire and just chill!!
    A good hoeing is worth two waterings.

  • AuntyRachAuntyRach Posts: 5,291
    Undecided.
    Enjoying this mini snap-shot of the population (some not U.K. too). 

    I wonder if anyone will postpone the parties and gatherings until the summer, and we will see tinsel and Santa in June?? Perhaps people will just skip a year and hope next year is better*. 


    *better could actually be a scaling-down and distilling of festivities?. Or is seeing family and friends the real cornerstone of celebrating Christmas?? 

    My garden and I live in South Wales. 
  • Family & friends have always been part of our Christmas, but numbers now sadly depleted.
    Our most memorable Christmas is still the one when we had a power cut on Xmas morning and we had friends, who doubled as substitute grandparents for our daughter, staying. Turkey had been in the oven for a good while already, so we got out the barbecue to finish it off, all wrapped up warm and we had Christmas dinner round the barbie :)
  • BenCottoBenCotto Posts: 4,718
    Yes, of course!
    My Italian teacher had a sharp idea. She says as this year has been so awful we should have the right on our next birthday not to add a year to our age if we so wish.
    Rutland, England
  • AuntyRachAuntyRach Posts: 5,291
    Undecided.
    My most memorable Christmas was the first year we were married, both working in the hospital with one of us on a run of day shifts, and one on nights. We didn’t see each other (or any other family) for 48 hours plus and I had a fishfinger sandwich for my Christmas Day meal. The camaraderie of working at Christmas is really special, and I would happily work it every year, but it’s better if you can come home to family after the shift. 
    My garden and I live in South Wales. 
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