What do you do come Christmas if you're an architect who lives in a neighborhood known for over-the-top holiday displays, and your wife drives a car with the license plate "GRSWLDS," a not-so-subtle reference to the Clark Griswald movie character made famous by Chevy Chase?
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Before he did that, however, he sawed off the top six feet of the tree and placed the tree top on his home's roof, making it appear as though the tree had crashed through the roof.
"We lived in a two-story house years ago and did a tree that was both on the first and second floors, a 20-foot-tree that we cut in half," Kruger told ABCNews.com. "Now we live in a smaller house so I thought let me put it through the roof."
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On Sunday Kruger woke up to see that "his baby," as he calls it, had fallen to the ground in an overnight wind storm.
"I was completely embarrassed," he said. "My wife was out at this point - she said, 'I did it once,' - but I was able to convince a colleague of mine to help me bolt it to the roof."
"The insanity of putting four bolts into a perfectly good roof is something probably to be noted," Kruger joked.
The bolts worked and the tree has stayed put, much to the delight of Kruger's own son, Miles, and the whole neighborhood.
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"He's in heaven," he said of Miles. "He loves pointing it out to the other kids in the neighborhood. The kids line up in front of the house and look at it and bring their friends by and go right up to the window to see how did it go through the roof."
The only topper Kruger is concerned with now, however, is how he is going to top this next Christmas.
"I think we'll definitely do it again next year. We've had a really great time doing it," he said. "And I don't know what we'll do to top it."
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