Ruby the Christmas tree is now in place ready to be lit at the U.S. Capitol.
The 78-foot red spruce was harvested from the from Pisgah National Forest. Each year, a tree is picked from a national forest for display in front of the Capitol in Washington. It鈥檚 been 26 years since North Carolina has provided a tree.
A nine-year-old student from Kituwah Academy on the Qualla Boundary was chosen to be part of the lighting ceremony. Governor Roy Cooper will also be in attendance for the November 29th event. You can watch a livestream of the 5 p.m. lighting .
Every year since 1970, the USDA Forest Service has provided a Christmas tree to the White House as gift from the people鈥檚 public lands to the U.S. Capitol Building.
The theme for this year鈥檚 initiative was from the Mountains to the Sea to highlight North Carolina鈥檚 geography and incredible biological diversity.
The National Forests in North Carolina encompass 1.25 million acres of the most biologically diverse ecosystems in the southeast spanning elevations in the forest range from sea level to over 6,500 feet - that includes some of the tallest peaks east of the Mississippi River.
The NC National Forests host about 6.5 million visitors a year making it among the most visited national forests in the country.
The tree started its journey at the WNC Agricultural Center in Fletcher where it was packed into a truck for the first stop on a tour of seventeen events to celebrate Ruby.
The third stop on the tree鈥檚 journey was to the Qualla Boundary where this year鈥檚 youth tree lighter lives. Catcuce Micco Tiger (Coche) is nine years old and is an Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians citizen.
Coche also has ancestry from the Seminole Tribe of Florida and Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma. He gets his name from his dad, which is a Seminole name. Catcuce means 鈥楲ittle Tiger鈥, Micco means 鈥楲eader/Chief鈥 in the Creek language.
At the event he shared that he attends New Kituwah Academy language immersion school, where he learns to read, write, and speak the Cherokee language.
鈥淚 want to go to Washington, D.C. to light the tree so I can represent the Tribe and my community and so everyone can have a good year. I also want to see where the president lives and maybe meet him,鈥 said Coche, in a press release from the U.S. Forest Service.