I received this from a friend of mine in an email and wanted to share it with you. The Easter egg tree is glorious!
A feast for the Easter Bunny: German couple decorate their garden tree with 10,000 painted eggs
Easter  comes but once a year - but one couple have turned it into a lifetime's  project.
German  pensioners Volker and Christa Kraft have decorated the tree in their back garden  in Saalfeld for Easter for more than 40 years.
The  tree now drips with more than 9,800 colourful Easter eggs, painted with pastoral  scenes and religious icons.
Volker  Kraft adds to the 9,800 Easter eggs hanging from the tree in garden of the home  he shares with his wife Christa
Each  egg must be painstakingly emptied of yolk and whites, to ensure it will not go  bad, before they can be hand painted and hung out for all to see.
The easiest  way is to pierce two holes in each end of the egg with a hat-pin, then blow out  the contents through a straw.
The  better equipped can use a syringe pushed through just one hole to extract the  gooey gubbins. But be cautious when handling raw eggs - they may carry  salmonella.
Symbol of  life: Carefully packed and intricately decorated Easter eggs lie waiting to be  hung from the Krafts' tree
The  egg is a pagan symbol of rebirth, widely used in spring festivals before its  adoption by early Christians as a symbol of the resurrection of  Jesus.
For  followers of Christianity they are symbolic of Christ rising from his tomb two  days after his death on the cross. 
In  ancient times, the Zoroastrians painted eggs for Nowrooz, their New Year  celebration, which falls on the spring equinox.
Sculptures in  the ruins of Persepolis, their capital, show people carrying eggs to their king  for the occasion 2,500 years ago.



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