My wife and I will be celebrating our 32nd Anniversary on October 20th. Tricia and I were engaged in San Antonio, Texas on the River Walk. After we were engaged, we were walking around 33 years ago and I picked up some acorns from some of the trees in front of the Alamo. I figured how cool it would be to have a mighty oak tree to remind us of the strength of a good marriage. I was able to get one of the acorns to germinate. The tree grew to be about two and a half feet tall in a pot we had outside our apartment in Houston. Then someone pulled it out of the pot and it died!
Several years ago, we returned to San Antonio and I got another handful of acorns and got another one to germinate. This one was about 3 feet tall. We picked out a good spot in the yard for it, the perfect spot. It was doing fine, BUT stopped growing and lost all it's leaves. Before you knew it, it was dead! It made us so sad to see the tree with no leaves, barren and dead. I wanted to give it every chance to rejuvenate, but the day came when, regrettably, I had to break it off at the bottom. I just left the roots in the ground. Looking at the broken off tree, sure enough the inside of the little tree was brown and dead.
Marriage, while not easy, has turned out to be a breeze in comparison to growing an oak tree that commemorates our matrimonial union. Imagine my surprise and joy when I walked in the yard the other day where the tree had been planted and saw what's shown in the photo at the top of this blog post. In that photo, you can see where I broke off the dead tree. But you can also see the fresh, healthy green growth coming from the roots below!
I rushed in to tell Tricia the good news. She was ecstatic and suggested that I might put a tomato cage around it to protect it. Good idea! I did just that. Then the other night, we were walking around the yard after dusk. We rounded the corner and Tricia tripped over the tomato cage. It was dark and she just didn't see it. The next morning at daylight, I looked and saw that she had stepped on the new growth of the live oak, bending and injuring the little tree.
You can see in the photo, I did my best to make a splint from a stick and loosely taped it with the oak tree to keep it straight. After two days, it's still looking good. I'm keeping it watered and added a little fertilizer. I am determined to make this tree survive! Imagine how big this tree would be had we been able to plant that first tree from 32 years ago?
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