Monday, June 23, 2008And here's what The Lil Tree That Could looks like today... note the forked pipes on the right side of the pic (in the background) for growth-reference:New Life Triumphant
Back in March I posted a photo of one of those instances where I dodged a bullet… or, more specifically, El Casa Móvil De Pennington dodged a bullet when this old forked tree came down during one of our better windstorms this past winter. The tree wasn’t old, actually. It was relatively young (at about 15 feet tall) but was most certainly diseased; the fork that came down had been dead for quite a while. The other half of the tree, however, looked pretty healthy and provided me with shade in the summer.
Well, that went away when the caretakers at Beautiful La Hacienda Trailer Park came out and cut the whole danged tree down in the process of hauling away the dead fork. I wasn’t home when the crime was committed and I would have objected (strenuously, even!) to losing that tree, had I been home. But…new life triumphs, as you can see… and what you see is about four feet worth of new growth sprouting out of the stump. I won’t get any shade to speak of this year, but in two years time? Should be good, methinks.
She's about ten feet tall now. Next year... afternoon shade!
Way cool. I love tales of triumph, even ones starring vegetation!
ReplyDeleteRemarkable! Trees just amaze me -- some of the survivors down around these parts are genuine marvels.
ReplyDeleteIt needs a bird feeder!
Good for you...bad for those of us in the landscaping industry. That kind of resiliency is the reason I have to spend way longer than I should pulling/uprooting/cutting out weeds (more like small trees since the owners had let the property go to seed) because I know if I don't get every last bit of the damn roots the stupid things will be back in a month or two.
ReplyDeleteThat's some pretty serious growth for just a year, though.
Jim: Maybe especially vegetation.
ReplyDeleteMoogie: Ya, all y'all have some real survivors. There's no place to actually hang a bird feeder on this tree now... it's more like a very large bush than a tree. Which is to say its branches are still pretty thin and supple...
Mike! Where the Hell have you been?