Most years, the flowers are still blooming when Kevin Milton starts his annual Christmas decorating regimen in early October. He starts with a black tree in his dining room, trimmed with pumpkins, bats and spooky ornaments.
By late November, the Halloween tree will have lots of company — elaborate themed Christmas trees everywhere that Milton can fit one, including the bathroom and stair landing — 42 in all, plus some 2-foot trees to conceal cords.
At 1,500 square feet, Milton's south Minneapolis house is no McMansion. So 42 trees means 12 trees in the dining room and 11 in the living room, creating a wall-to-wall Christmas experience. It's the way he likes it, and the way Christmas should be, in his opinion.
"People say, 'I don't have room to decorate for Christmas,' " Milton said. "You have room."
All those trees require infrastructure updates. "Every year, I have the electric guy come back for more outlets," Milton said.
And it's not just the electricity that gets a workout during the run-up to Christmas. Milton continues his day job, in broadband sales, but his hobbies are put on hold while he spends hours every evening on his trees. He's a drummer for a working band, the Roxbury Band, which plays casinos and other gigs — but not over the holidays.
"Even my band knows not to book around Christmas," he said.
A Christmas person
Milton's herculean decorating feat sets the stage for the open house that he and his husband, Bill Emery, host every year in early December.