You are reading

Turn Your Christmas Tree into Mulch at City’s Annual Mulchfest Starting Sunday

Residents can bring their Christmas trees to city parks and gardens to be turned into mulch during the annual Mulchfest. Pictured at the 2018 event in Long Island City is Rob Basch, president of the Hunters Point Parks Conservancy (Photo provided by the HPPC)

Dec. 23, 2021 By Michael Dorgan

The city’s annual Mulchfest is back for another year, giving residents a chance to dispose of their Christmas trees in an eco-friendly way.

Residents can bring their Christmas trees to a select number of city parks to be turned into mulch during the annual Mulchfest. This year’s event will take place from Dec. 26 through Jan. 9, with drop-off locations throughout the five boroughs.

New Yorkers can drop off their trees at any of the locations for free to later be chipped and turned to mulch. Residents must remove all lights, ornaments and netting from the trees before bringing them to a Mulchfest site.

The mulch created by the trees will be used by the city in public parks and gardens to help trees and plants grow. Mulch adds nutrients to the soil, deters weeds, retains moisture and keeps roots warm.

Attendees can also get to watch their tree go through the chipper machine at designated sites from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Jan. 8 and Jan 9. Visitors can also take home a free bag of mulch.

Nearly 50,000 trees were recycled during last year’s Mulchfest. The annual event is run by the Parks Dept. and the Dept. of Sanitation.

Drop off locations and chipping sites

Astoria Park located at 19th Street and Hoyt Avenue
Cunningham Park located at 196th Place and Union Turnpike
Forest Park located at Forest Park Drive and Woodhaven Boulevard
Francis Lewis Park located at 3rd Avenue and Whitestone Expressway
Hunters Point South Park located at 51st Avenue and Center Boulevard
Idlewild Park located at Springfield Lane and 149th Avenue
Juniper Valley Park located at 80th Street between Juniper Boulevard North and South
Travers Park located at 78th Street and 34th Avenue

Drop-off location only
Captain Mario Fajardo Playground located at Kissena Boulevard at Booth Memorial Avenue*
John Golden Park located at 215th Place and 33rd Avenue
Queens County Farm Museum located at 73-50 Little Neck Parkway
Queensbridge Park located at Vernon Boulevard and Queensbridge Park Greenway
Rockaway Beach located at 94th Street and Shorefront Parkway
Roy Wilkins Park located at the park entrance at Merrick Boulevard and Foch Boulevard
Windmill Community Garden located at 39-22 29th St.
Windmuller Park at Lawrence Virgilio Playground located at 39th Drive and 54th Street

For more information on Mulchfest and locations, click here

A city worker getting ready to run a Christmas tree through a chipper machine (Photo: NYC Council)

email the author: news@queenspost.com

3 Comments

Click for Comments 
Selim

The sale of real trees for Christmas should be banned in NYC. Get a fake tree and dont add lights. Electricity is to expensive.

2
9
Reply
ABoondy

thats dumb. not everyone follows the Dec 25 xmas. there are many orthodox that follow the old calendar, which has xmas in January. in any case, many keep their trees past that date.

8
1
Reply

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Hall of Famer Lou Carnesecca, legendary St. John’s basketball coach, dies at 99

The St. John’s University community will gather to mourn legendary basketball coach Lou Carnesecca on the Hillcrest campus he loved with all of his heart Friday morning for his Funeral Mass at St. Thomas More Church, where he will be remembered not just for building a dynamic program, but for the way he did it. The beloved coach died peacefully surrounded by family and friends on Saturday, Nov. 30, at age 99 and just five weeks shy of his 100th birthday.

“Throughout his long life, Coach Carnesecca represented St. John’s with savvy, humility, smarts, tenacity, wit, integrity and grace,” SJU President Rev. Brian Shanley said. “He was the public face of our University, and he embodied the values of our Catholic and Vincentian mission. We thank God for his legacy.”