After one Colorado sheriff had to be convinced to spread holiday cheer, the rest of his office conducted quite the operation to get a massive Christmas tree into their new department lobby.

"Those who've seen our beautiful new employee entrance know it is big, open, and shockingly EMPTY," Larimer County Sheriff John Feyen wrote on Facebook, adding the idea was floated weeks ago to put a Christmas tree in it. 

He said he was initially against the idea because he believes "trees belong in the forest," but that 549 of the 550 employees in the department supported the idea, so he caved. 

"This tree was slated to come down anyway due to wildfire mitigation. And I thought it would bring joy to the agency," Feyen wrote.

AS THE JOY OF CHRISTMAS NEARS, FOUR FAITH LEADERS REVEAL ADVENT'S BLESSINGS: 'WE LOOK FORWARD WITH HOPE'

Wildland firefighters more tree in CO

The men can be seen doing whatever it takes to get the tree into the building. (Sheriff John Feyen)

Video from the social media post shows wildland firefighters working for LCSO, some of them in Santa hats, determined to get the two-story-tall pine tree into its position on Dec. 20. 

The tree made it through the entrance door, but was not easy to maneuver into the reception area. The men can be seen holding on, backtracking and creatively angling before finally getting it in. 

CHRISTMAS CAPITAL OF TEXAS CELEBRATES THE HOLIDAYS WITH 1,400-PLUS EVENTS ACROSS 40 DAYS

Group of men pose near tree

The wildland firefighters who work for Larimer County Sheriff's Office in Fort Collins, Colorado, pose with the tree. (Sheriff John Feyen)

Decorated LCSO tree

The fully decorated tree on display in Fort Collins. (Sheriff John Feyen)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

"Staff lined the lobby, the stairs, and the balcony watching their well orchestrated efforts to bring the tree in, get it upright, and get it decorated. The smiles were AMAZING!" Feyen wrote.