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Michigan farms sending 600 Christmas trees to military families in North Carolina

Posted at 7:05 AM, Nov 27, 2018
and last updated 2018-11-27 07:05:12-05

GOBLES, Mich. — Dozens of volunteers gathered at Wahmhoff Farm Nursery in the small town of Gobles, Michigan to send off 600 Christmas trees to military families in North Carolina, according to WXMI.

Before the packing began, Dan Wahmhoff stood in the snow in his coat and hoodie and thanked dozens of volunteers for coming to Wahmhoff Farm Nursery Monday morning. The volunteers were bundled in hats, scarves and gloves, and ready to lift close to 600 Christmas trees.

“Folks like yourself coming here to volunteer your time in this kind of weather, it’s just so great,” Wahmhoff said to the crowd. “I think we all appreciate our troops.”

After a quick prayer, they were off to work. Volunteers lifted tightly-bound, 5-foot pine and fir trees and placed them on conveyor belts that fed into two FedEx trucks. Volunteers inside the trucks then stacked the trees, one on top of the other, as part of the annual Trees for Troops event at Wahmhoff Farms.

“It’s an event we’ve been doing since 2005,” Wahmhoff said. “We’re just one of the participants. We happen to be a centrally-located farm. So other farms bring their trees here.”

All the trees were packed for military families at North Carolina’s Camp Lejeune, a Marine Corps' base.

“It’s a big deal to me to be able to contribute back, to give them something positive for their Christmas time,” Wahmhoff said. “I know a lot of them are sacrificing it, away from their families or the families are by themselves.”

Veteran Pete Matthews said he remembered his first holiday season away from his family. It was 1961 and he was serving in the U.S. Coast Guard at the time.

“Being a young person, first time really a long way from home, it’s good and it’s bad,” Matthews said. “I spent Christmases in the North Atlantic, Thanksgiving at sea where you got processed turkey.”

However, for the families at Camp Lejeune, they'll be getting Christmas trees on Thursday, November 29. The volunteers finished loading both trucks within an hour. Once they were done, the trucks began their 890-mile trek south, all travel expenses covered by FedEx.

“It’s a nice little touch to give them a feeling of home,” Wahmhoff said.