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WATER THAT TREE
Courtesy NIST Building and Fire Research Laboratory
What's a holiday party or even the traditional Christmas morning scene itself without a
beautifully decorated tree? If your household, as those of more than 33 million other
American homes, includes a natural tree in its festivities, take to heart the salesperson's suggestion --
Keep the tree watered. That's good advice, and not just to create a
fragrant indoor winter wonderland atmosphere.
Christmas trees account for 400 fires annually, resulting in 10 deaths, 80 injuries and
more than $15 million in property damage. Typically shorts in electrical lights or open
flames from candles, lighters or matches start tree fires. Well-watered trees are not a
problem. Dry and neglected trees can be.
The video clip above from the Building and Fire Research Laboratory of the National
Institute of Standards and Technology illustrates what happens when fire touches a dry
tree. Within three seconds of ignition, the dry Scotch pine is completely ablaze. At five
seconds, the fire extends up the tree and black smoke with searing gases streaks across
the ceiling. Fresh air near the floor feeds the fire. The sofa, coffee table and the
carpet ignite prior to any flame contact. Within 40 seconds "flashover" occurs
-- that's when an entire room erupts into flames, oxygen is depleted and dense, deadly
toxic smoke engulfs the scene.
Wet trees tell a different story. For comparative purposes, the NIST fire safety engineers
selected a green Scotch pine, had it cut in their presence, had an additional two inches
cut from the trunk's bottom, and placed the tree in a stand with at least a 7.6 liter
water capacity. The researchers maintained the Scotch pine's water on a daily basis. A
single match could not ignite the tree. A second attempt in which an electric current
ignited an entire matchbook failed to fire the tree. Finally they applied an open flame to
the tree using a propane torch. The branches ignited briefly, but self-extinguished when
the researchers removed the torch from the branches.
As NIST fire safety engineers say: REMEMBER, A WET TREE IS A SAFE
TREE!!
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