Massachusetts
Massachusetts high school scores from Friday
BASEBALL
Andover 4, Haverhill 0
Ayer Shirley 6, Bromfield 4
Billerica 5, Lowell 4
Braintree 4, King Philip 0
Cathedral 6, Roxbury Prep 2
Clinton 4, Littleton 3
Duxbury 11, Quincy 3
Groton 9, Phillips Academy Andover 5
Groton-Dunstable 5, Marlboro 2
Hanover 5, Marshfield 0
Lowell Catholic 6, Whittier 3
Mansfield 9, Oliver Ames 8
Monomoy 10, Rising Tide 0
Mystic Valley 8, Everett 2
North Andover 4, Dracut 2
North Middlesex 11, Fitchburg 0
Norwell 10, Sandwich 2
Oliver Ames 9, Mansfield 8
Pingree 4, Middlesex 3
Plymouth South 10, Hingham 3
St. John Paul II 13, Nantucket 3
St. John’s Prep 4, Lawrence 3
St. Mark’s 6, Cushing 3
St. Mary’s (L) 8, Bishop Fenwick 3
Shawsheen 6, Greater Lawrence 2
Somerville 9, Winchester 4
Tewksbury 3, Chelmsford 2
Westford Academy 10, Bedford 0
Whitman-Hanson 9, Scituate 0
GIRLS GOLF
BOYS LACROSSE
Apponequet 10, Old Rochester 4
Billerica 14, Dracut 5
Bishop Fenwick 10, St. Mary’s (L) 4
Bridgewater-Raynham 6, Nauset 5
Dartmouth 12, Plymouth North 3
Duxbury 11, Lincoln-Sudbury 9
Lexington 10, Stoneham 3
Littleton 6, Shepherd Hill 2
Lynnfield 16, Hamilton-Wenham 0
Martha’s Vineyard 8, Monomoy 6
Minuteman 13, Mystic Valley 3
Newburyport 17, North Reading 1
Old Colony 17, Upper Cape 1
Pentucket 13, Essex Tech 11
Reading 15, Wakefield 5
Quincy/North Quincy 10, Braintree 9
Sandwich 7, Plymouth South 6 (ot)
Southeastern 16, Blue Hills 6
Stoughton 9, Dedham 6
Taunton 8, Norton 7
GIRLS LACROSSE
Abington 15, Rockland 8
Apponequet 13, Old Rochester 10
Bishop Feehan 12, Holliston 6
Bishop Fenwick 8, St. Mary’s (L) 6
Braintree 18, Quincy 4
Burlington 18, Woburn 8
Dartmouth 14, Plymouth North 6
Dexter Southfield 18, St. Mark’s 7
Hamilton-Wenham 17, Lynnfield 9
Lexington 15, Stoneham 4
Lincoln-Sudbury 9, Bedford (NH) 5
Malden 11, Northeast 5
Manchester Essex 13, Georgetown 0
Newburyport 16, North Reading 1
North Attleboro 9, Oliver Ames 7
Norwell 8, Foxboro 6
Pentucket 19, Essex Tech 7
St. John Paul II 12, Nauset 11
Tewksbury 12, Lowell 5
Upper Cape 14, Old Colony 7
Ursuline 8, Dedham 6
Wayland 15, Boston Latin 9
Winchester 22, Watertown 10
SAILING
Winchester 4, BC High 0
SOFTBALL
Apponequet 12, New Bedford 0
Arlington Catholic 5, Wakefield 4
Bedford 7, Westford Academy 0
Beverly 5, Masconomet 0
Bishop Feehan 14, Newton North 2
Bridgewater-Raynham 6, Braintree 2
Canton 17, Durfee 10
Dedham 12, Holliston 0
Dennis-Yarmouth 16, Barnstable 8
Georgetown 13, Rockport 3
Gloucester 2, Danvers 0
Groton-Dunstable 8, Oakmont 7
Hamilton-Wenham 6, Manchester Essex 5
Hopkinton 20, Dover-Sherborn 0
King Phillip 3, Archbishop Williams 2
Lincoln-Sudbury 5, Tyngsboro 2
Lynnfield 4, Triton 2
Marblehead 1, Saugus 0
Marshfield 8, Hanover 7 (9i)
Minuteman 9, Shawsheen 6
Monomoy 7, Falmouth 4
Nauset 12, Sturgis 9
Needham 14, Natick 2
Norton 3, Westwood 0
Norwell 13, Sandwich 5
Pentucket 7, Newburyport 4
Plymouth North 16, Quincy/North Quincy 4
Plymouth South 4, Hingham 1
Rivers 4, Dexter Southfield 1
Silver Lake 5, Pembroke 0
Taunton 8, Oliver Ames 0
Tewksbury 13, Haverhill 1
Wayland 7, Boston Latin 4 (9i)
Whitman-Hanson 15, Scituate 0 (5i)
Winchester 16, Somerville 6
BOYS RUGBY
Marshfield 29, Hingham 24
BOYS TENNIS
Andover 3, Cambridge 2
Apponequet 4, Dartmouth 1
Arlington 5, Malden Catholic 0
Barnstable 3, Nauset 2
Billerica 3, Tewksbury 2
Dedham 5, Holliston 0
Duxbury 5, Quincy 0
Hanover 4, Marshfield 1
Hingham 5, Plymouth South 0
Lowell 4, Lawrence 1
Manchester Essex 5, Ipswich 0
Marblehead 4, Beverly 1
Martha’s Vineyard 4, Monomoy 1
Nantucket 4, Rising Tide 1
North Quincy 5, Plymouth North 0
Norton 3, Westwood 2
Quincy 3, Randolph 1
Rivers 7, St. Sebastian’s 0
Scituate 5, Whitman-Hanson 0
St. John’s Prep 3, Newton North 2
Wayland 4, Boston Latin 1
Westford Academy 3, Bedford 2
Weymouth 4, Norwell 1
GIRLS TENNIS
Andover 5, Billerica 0
Danvers 5, Saugus 0
Dartmouth 3, Apponequet 2
Duxbury 5, Quincy 0
Hamilton-Wenham 5, Rockport 0
Hanover 3, Marshfield 2
Hingham 5, Plymouth South 0
Holliston 5, Dedham 0
Lynnfield 4, Swampscott 1
Marblehead 3, Beverly 2
Manchester Essex 3, Ipswich 2
Monomoy 4, Martha’s Vineyard 1
Nantucket 5, Rising Tide 0
Nauset 5, Barnstable 0
Needham 4, Natick 1
North Andover 5, Lowell 0
Plymouth North 5, North Quincy 0
Sharon 4, Oliver Ames 1
BOYS TRACK
GIRLS TRACK
Apponequet 89, Somerset Berkley 47
BOYS VOLLEYBALL
Brookline 3, North Quincy 0
Haverhill 3, Lawrence 0
Lexington 3, Cambridge 1
Lincoln-Sudbury 3, Westford Academy 0
Malden 3, Arlington 1
Needham 3, Lowell 0
New Bedford 3, Durfee 0
Quincy 3, Randolph 1
Revere 3, Madison Park 2
Wayland 3, Newton South 0
Massachusetts
The challenges and joys of being a Christmas tree farmer in Massachusetts
Local News
Christmas tree season is short, intense, and years in the making.
Christmas tree farmers across Massachusetts had their own kind of Black Friday this year. On Nov. 28, Governor Maura Healey dubbed the day “Green Friday,” a push to kick off the holiday season while spotlighting the state’s Christmas tree and nursery industries.
While shoppers elsewhere woke before dawn to map out traffic-free routes, scour deals, and stack lawn chairs in car trunks to claim a place in line, farmers were already in the thick of a different kind of rush — one that had been years in the making.
The Christmas tree season, after all, begins long before the holidays arrive. For Meagan MacNeill, the new co-owner of River Wind Tree Farm in Lancaster, this year marked her very first season in the business. And as it turned out, she was unprepared, she said.
Customers began gathering at 9 a.m., an hour before opening, eager to flood the fields and begin their search for the perfect tree. It was all-hands on deck for the MacNeills; Meagan assembled both her immediate and extended family to help out.
The season began and closed in a flash. They sold out of cut-your-own trees the very next day, on Saturday, Nov. 29, and of pre-cut trees two weekends later.
The one word Meagan used to describe the season? “Insanity,” she said without missing a beat.
“I think it’s a new Olympic sport, getting the biggest and best Christmas tree,” she added with a laugh.
The challenges
The MacNeills are one of 459 Christmas tree farms across the state, which operate on nearly 3,000 acres of land and contribute more than $4.5 million to the local economy every year.
Like MacNeill, many farmers sold out of trees quicker this year than in years past (particularly since before the pandemic), according to David Morin, the communications liaison and former president of the Massachusetts Christmas Tree Association. He also owns Arrowhead Acres in Uxbridge, a Christmas tree farm and wedding venue.
Pre-pandemic, he was open for four weekends: Thanksgiving weekend, plus the three following it. He doubled his sales in 2020 during the pandemic. Now, he’s struggling to meet demand with a lower inventory.
“I was lucky to make it through two weekends. I actually shut down early on the second weekend because I didn’t have enough trees,” he said.
It’s not just that individual farms are struggling to meet demand, but that the number of farms nationally are dwindling. Between 2002 and 2022, the number of farms growing Christmas trees fell by nearly 30%, down from more than 13,600 to about 10,000, according to the American Farm Bureau Federation, an agricultural organization.
Why are there fewer farms? Illan Kessler, who operates North Pole Xmas Trees, a wholesale grower in Colebrook, New Hampshire and choose-and-cut Noel’s Tree Farm in Litchfield, attributed the decline to farmers aging out of the industry. This, coupled with a lack of interest from the next generation to continue the business, means fewer farms.
“They get older, and then no one takes over, so there’s less and less tree farms,” he said.
It takes between seven and 10 years to grow a Christmas tree. Farmers are competing not just with national chains like Home Depot or Walmart — which “are super-influencers when it comes to price,” Kessler said — but also with artificial Christmas tree suppliers.
“The artificial Christmas tree companies make so much revenue that they have a marketing budget that eclipses — at a magnitude of thousands-to-one — what real Christmas tree growers have to promote and market their own products,” Kessler added.
Prices of trees have gone up this year compared to last too, driven by inflation and tariffs along with a dwindling labor force and increasing costs of seedlings and machinery, Kessler and Morin said.
Morin likened being a Christmas tree farmer to a “love-hate” relationship.
“The week after you’ve sold the trees, you’re in love with them. But for the other 11 months of the year, if it isn’t gypsy moths or caterpillars or one kind of a bug or another, or lack of rain or too much rain, it’s a constant hassle,” he said.
But despite it all, they wouldn’t give it up for the world.
“It’s like a Hallmark movie,” said Kessler. “We love selling Christmas trees, and we are super grateful to be in this business. I feel so blessed. I love what I do,” he added.
Joy to the world
Meagan and Steven MacNeill had dreamed of owning a Christmas tree farm in Vermont when they were newlyweds, but life got in the way. Before becoming farmers, Meagan worked as a school counselor, and Steven worked as a pharmacist — a job he still holds full time, she said.
“I knew, for me in particular, the traditional kind of 9-to-5 job didn’t feel right,” she said. She started working at a garden center and volunteering at an alpaca farm in Harvard on Sundays to satisfy the itch to be outdoors working in nature. Her husband later joined her at the alpaca farm, and it became their Sunday morning tradition for almost two years.
The couple bought River Wind Tree Farm in June from the Wareck family, fulfilling their two-decades-old dream to be Christmas tree farmers.
But it wasn’t the fairy tale they had dreamed it to be. From learning to identify the farm’s many tree varieties — including exotic Christmas trees such as Nordmann fir, Korean balsam, and noble fir — to navigating drought and pest pressures, the experience was as much a challenge as it was a labor of love for the MacNeill family.
“The way the season looked was kind of a crapshoot because we had no idea what we were doing,” Meagan laughed. “It’s been a big learning curve for us. We still have a ton to learn.”
The MacNeills plan on adding alpacas to the farm next year, and are getting creative on keeping revenue flowing outside of the Christmas tree season by holding photoshoots at the farm.
Despite the arduous work, whirlwind season, years of preparation, and fierce competition, Meagan is grateful to be in the industry — and she’s not looking back.
For many Christmas tree farmers, herself included, the pull is hard to define. It’s rooted in community, tradition, and the simple joy of bringing people together for the holidays.
“It’s the joy of people coming to pick out their Christmas tree, and even having my family be a part of it,” Meagan said. “People coming out and just connecting to the land for a little while, or being with their family, and having these traditions that are not centered around electronics, but just being present. It’s so special.”
The Queue: holiday streaming edition
Massachusetts
Driver charged in Plymouth hit-and-run
Authorities said a driver is facing charges after a hit-and-run crash left a pedestrian badly hurt this weekend in Plymouth, Massachusetts.
The crash happened around 6:30 p.m. Saturday on Court Street. Police said the driver briefly stopped before fleeing the scene.
The victim was airlifted to a Boston hospital with critical injuries. Plymouth police said Monday that the patient is in stable condition and faces a long road to recovery.
The driver, identified as Francis Kelly of Plymouth, is charged with negligent operation and leaving the scene of a crash causing personal injury.
“We would like to sincerely thank the public for the tips provided and for sharing surveillance footage that proved critical to this investigation,” Plymouth Police Capt. Marc Higgins said in a statement. “Incidents like this underscore the strength of community cooperation in supporting victims and ensuring accountability.”
Massachusetts
White Christmas chances rise in western Massachusetts
CHICOPEE, Mass. (WWLP) – There is a chance for snow leading up to Christmas.
In western Massachusetts, the chances for a white Christmas go up the farther north you are or the closer you are to the Berkshires. In Springfield, the chance for at least one inch of snow on Christmas Day is around 40 to 50 percent.
In Pittsfield, the chances are over 75 percent. In the extreme northwest corner of Massachusetts, near North Adams, the historical chance for a white Christmas is over 90 percent. So, it definitely helps your chances for snow if you’re in one of the higher-elevation areas.
How much snow is expected Tuesday
Light snow will begin on Tuesday around sunrise and continue on and off for much of the day until the evening. A minor accumulation is expected in the Pioneer Valley with a few inches in the hills and Berkshires. Slick roads and sidewalks are possible, especially if not treated. High temperatures will be in the low to mid-30s.
What’s the chance of a white Christmas in western Mass?
As of right now, the chances for a white Christmas this year are definitely higher than in the past few years, with some snow on Tuesday. Of course, the best chance for the snow to stick around until Christmas Day without melting will be back in the Berkshires.
December 25 2025 12:00 am
Christmas Eve and Christmas Day both look dry and comfortable.
Local News Headlines
WWLP-22News, an NBC affiliate, began broadcasting in March 1953 to provide local news, network, syndicated, and local programming to western Massachusetts. Download the 22News Plus app on your TV to watch live-streaming newscasts and video on demand.
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