She placed the hand full of soil into the hole and tamped the rich mud lovingly around the small roots of young willow cutting which she had taken from herfavorite tree at her valley home.
She asked the nature spirits to bless the young tree and keep it safe.
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Both were putting it all on the line andsetting their roots into no mans land.
She would bring the water and the tree would give her shade.
A good trade to be sure.
com) As she tamped the last bit of soil in place and soaked the young trees roots she thought to herself, "This is tobe our newhome forever.
" And the story begins.
The willow stood high on its roots trying hard not to let its branches touch the ground.
What was that woman thinking when she put that goat so near?
Now it would have to start the climb all over again.
And all the while it watched as the woman planted the other trees, grass, flowers and gardens.
The willow watched all the animals come and go, it tended the kittens,kids and children.
The willowstood bythe night Lady Savanna's thetriplets were born and gave her comfort and care when one did not make it.
Year after year itgrew taller and taller,just drinking up the cool water and basking in the sun.
Yet, we survived.
It was happy to give shade from the smoldering heat of summer and high rise protection to all manors of birds, the squirrels, and owls that live close by.
Each year it would raise its branches high into the air and dance with the big winds while its companions swayed to and fro.
Fromtheir very beginnings they would spend many wonderful days riding the tree swing far out over the cliff and hi into the sky.
And of course the willow was one of the first things that all the grand childrencame to know and love.
The echo of the joyful screams lingers in the old wood long after the childrenhave grown and their children gonehome.
I attributed it to a very hot and dry year.
Ithought with the new rains it would be able to sustain its need for water.
I was wrong, and todayI had to declare it dead.
I called for the wood cutter.
It is such a big hole in what I am familiar with.
It has protected me from thehot summer sun fortwenty five years.
From a tiny cutting it grew to a grand tree before my eyes.
.
.
.
and now it lays broken upon the ground while I grasp for words to describe the feelings.