🎄🎅🎁 Fake or real: What’s the best tree to have at Christmas? 6 Minute English

87,559 views ・ 2019-12-29

BBC Learning English


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Neil: Hello and happy Christmas!
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This is 6 Minute English with me, Neil.
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And joining me today is Sam.
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Sam: Hello.
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Neil: So, Sam, are you feeling excited
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about Christmas?
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Sam: Of course! Time with friends and
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family, eating lots, partying, presents –
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and generally indulging – what’s not to like?
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Neil: Indulging – allowing yourself to have
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perhaps too much of something you
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enjoy. Well, it only happens once a year,
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Sam. But for those of us who do celebrate
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Christmas, it comes at a price.
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Sam: Yes, well buying all those presents
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can be expensive.
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Neil: Not just that, Sam. I mean it comes
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at a cost to the environment, as we’ll
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explain shortly.
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But let’s start off with a quiz question
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for you to answer. In 2010, a Christmas
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tree in Belgium was awarded the world
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record for having the most lights on it –
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but do you know how many? Were there…
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a) 19,672, b) 94,672 or c) 194,672.
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What do you think, Sam?
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Sam: Well, I don’t think you could fit 194, 673
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lights on a Christmas tree, so I’ll say a) 19,672.
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Neil: OK. Well, we’ll find out how ‘bright’
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you are at the end of the programme!
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Of course, Christmas trees are the
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ultimate Christmas decoration. It’s part of
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the Christmas tradition and millions are
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bought around the world each year.
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But what impact do Christmas trees - real
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and artificial - have on the environment?
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Sam: Well before we answer that, let’s
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hear from some of the BBC Learning English
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team who chose to have a real Christmas
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tree in their home and find out why…
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Phil: Well, you've got the smell of it.
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You've got the look of it. But more
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importantly, it’s Christmas trees are
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supposed to be symbolic, aren't they?
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So the idea of something that stays green
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all year, so bringing that into your house it,
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it means something.
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Jiaying: I just think a real Christmas tree
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is more festive and more Christmassy.
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And it's just the tradition to get a real
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Christmas tree, that's all.
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Roy: There’s something more beautiful
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about the nature, the smell, the feel, the
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look of the tree and I like it to be sustainable.
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So, as long as I get my tree from a person
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that promises to grow two or three in its
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place, then I'm really, really happy.
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Neil: Yes, I agree – you can’t beat having a
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real Christmas tree. And as Phil said, it’s
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symbolic – it represents something important
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– and here a Christmas tree is the symbol
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of Christmas.
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Sam: And as Jiaying mentioned, it’s a
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tradition – something that’s done regularly
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and has become the expected thing to do
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– and I’d agree it makes things more festive
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– a word to describe the joyful feeling you
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get when celebrating something like Christmas.
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Neil: But of course all these trees are
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often thrown away, which is wasteful.
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That's why Roy mentioned his tree being
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sustainable – which means
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they can continue to be grown and cut
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down over a longer period so it’s less
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harmful to the environment.
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Sam: Well, an alternative to a real
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Christmas tree is a fake or artificial one,
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which is what Feifei from our team has in
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her house. What are the reasons why?
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Feifei: We have a plastic Christmas tree,
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which we've had for about nine years. So
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it's plastic so you can re-use it every year
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and it's more economical, and we don't
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have to keep buying new trees.
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Neil: So Feifei’s fake tree is made of
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plastic – so that’s not great for recycling
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– but the good thing is she uses it year
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after year which makes it economical –
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which means it doesn’t cost a lot of
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money, it’s good value.
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Sam: Ah, but even Feifei admits it doesn’t
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have the smell and feel of a real tree. It’s
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a dilemma isn’t it, Neil?
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Neil: Yes – what’s best for us and what’s
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best for the environment? The BBC’s
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Reality Check programme found that real
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trees take about 12 years to grow and as
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they do, they absorb carbon from the
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atmosphere and nitrogen from the soil –
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so a good thing.
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Sam: But when it’s chopped down it starts
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to release emissions back into the
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atmosphere – especially if you have to
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transport it to your home. And when
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Christmas is over, if it ends up in landfill,
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the tree’s carbon footprint will be higher.
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Neil: But its carbon footprint will be
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lowered if it’s recycled or composted –
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that’s the process of allowing it to decay
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and then adding it to the ground to
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improve soil quality.
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A fake tree on the other hand is usually
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imported, and can’t usually be recycled
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but, as Feifei mentioned, it can be re-used.
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But without any type of Christmas tree,
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where would we put all those lights I
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mentioned earlier, Sam? I asked you: In
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2010, a Christmas tree in Belgium was
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awarded the world record for having the
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most lights on it – but did you know how
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many? What do you say, Sam?
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Sam: I think I said 19,672.
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Neil: Oh dear, not very bright I’m afraid! There
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were in fact 194, 672!
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Sam: Wow – think of the electricity that
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must have used!
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Neil: Indeed. Well let’s enlighten everyone
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with some of the vocabulary we’ve
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discussed today.
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Sam: OK, well we started talking about
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'indulging' – that means allowing yourself
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to have perhaps too much of something
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you enjoy.
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Neil: When something is 'symbolic', it
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represents something important. And the
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word 'festive' describes the joyful feeling
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you get when celebrating something like
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Christmas.
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Sam: Like the festive jumper you are
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wearing today, Neil – very jolly!
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OK, next we mentioned
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'sustainable' – which means the ability to
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do something over a long period of time
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without harming the environment.
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Neil: 'Economical' describes doing
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something that doesn’t cost a lot of
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money, it’s good value.
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Sam: And when something is 'composted',
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it is allowed to decay – and it turns into
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compost which can be added back into
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the soil to improve its quality.
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Neil: Thank you, Sam. And that brings us
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to the end of 6 Minute English for now. It
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just leaves us to wish you a very happy
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Christmas. Goodbye.
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Sam: Goodbye.
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