Linda K Sienkiewicz

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Easter Eggs in Trees – Traditions

March 18, 2016 By Linda K Sienkiewicz

easter eggs in trees tradition

My daughter looked puzzled when I told her I wanted to make Easter Egg Trees with the grandkids. “What’s an Easter Egg tree?” And “Who ever came up with the idea of hanging eggs from trees?”

I do wonder indeed!

Sign of new life

Apparently the origins have been lost, but the tradition may have begun in Germany when eggs, being signs of new life, were hung on the yet-bare branches of trees in early spring.

German Volker Kraft made Easter Egg Trees an extreme tradition when he began hanging hand-blown decorated eggs (made by Mrs. Kraft) on a tree in his yard in 1965. Every year, his wife made more eggs. Every year, he hung them. In 2012, Kraft and his grown children hung over 10,000 eggs on their tree! Aren’t they beautiful?

Easter Eggs in Trees - Traditions
The Kraft family Easter Egg Tree in Saafeld, Germany

The last tree the Krafts decorated was in 2015; the eggs were donated to a local organization.

Jelly bean eggs

When I was a girl, my mother would help me push big jelly beans onto the thorns of a thorn tree branch she’d stuck in a pot, and my top-heavy version of an Easter Egg Tree sat on the glass coffee table in the living room every Easter. My father also hid jelly beans in the basement for my brother and me to find. What fun to inevitably discover a stale jelly bean around Halloween.

One Easter many years ago, I hung plastic eggs from a sapling tree in our front yard to surprise my then-young children. The bigger surprise came the next morning when we learned someone had driven right across the lawn and over the tree for laughs. I didn’t think it was funny. I didn’t bother with an Easter Egg tree after that. No wonder my grown daughter now had no idea what an Easter Egg Tree was.

Rekindled tradition

This year, I cut two sucker branches from a thorn tree, stuck them florist’s foam in pots from the Dollar Store, and my granddaughter and grandson hung tiny ornaments from the branches. It wasn’t long before the 2-1/2 year-old lost interest, but my daughter enjoyed finishing his tree.

traditions - easter egg tree

Thank you for visiting.

Linda K. Sienkiewicz is a writer, poet, and artist:
Multi-finalist award winning novel In the Context of Love
Picture book Gordy and the Ghost Crab

Latest poetry chapbook: Sleepwalker

Connect with Linda: LinkTree

Filed Under: Art & Crafting, It's Personal Tagged With: crafting, easter eggs, family, tradition

About Linda

Award- winning writer, poet & artist. Cynical optimist. Super klutz. Corgi fan. Author of two novels, a picture book which she wrote and illustrated, and five poetry chapbooks. More here.

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