A STUNNING Christmas tree from the ‘land of the giants’ has been chosen to grace one of the world’s most famous landmarks.

Forestry England has despatched a British grown 42-foot Sitka spruce from 63,000 hectare (155,000 acre) Kielder Forest, Northumberland, to stand proud at the foot of Big Ben in London.

It is set to be in place this weekend and adorned with Christmas lights, which will be switched on to raise a festival cheer across Westminster and the capital. 

READ MORE: Second episode of Hugh Bonneville narrated Channel 5 doc on Kielder Forest to air

Kielder is England’s biggest forest and one of the very few places in the UK that can supply such tall festive trees.  In addition a 25 footer has been despatched to stand in the medieval Westminster Hall and another smaller tree supplied for the Speaker’s House.
This year over 90 other outsized specimens, some up to 55 foot tall, will also take up position at prime locations across the UK. To ensure sustainability, seedlings from previously selected trees have been planted in the vast woodland, and some may even be be destined to stand beneath Big Ben in the 2050s. 

Forestry Journal:

Ian Green, from Forestry England, said: “It’s a big honour to be able to supply a tree from the 150 million growing in Kielder for such a starring role. It has been hand selected by experts to look good from every angle and was carefully felled by an experienced chainsaw operator to ensure its good looks were kept in tact.  It really is a beauty.

"But it’s also a credit to the way to the way the forest is managed.  Kielder is an internationally important habitat for wildlife and also England’s major producer of sustainable timber.  Seeing the tree lit up on view to the whole world will be an immense source of pride for all of us.”