In my backyard there stands an old Cottonwood Tree
most of the limbs twisted, brown, leafless every year.
There are a few on which there are leaves which are still
green, where life in this giant continues to fight to survive.
In time, with years of aging, standing against winds,
a covering of ice from frozen winter rains, and snow,
which sometimes covered every branch and made Old
Cottonwood appeared as though Mother Nature had
become an artist whose pallet had held one color, white.
A few years ago there were other trees standing around Old
Cottonwood Tree which had also reached the end of their
time, no longer able to stand in the wind, a danger to others
if they should fall onto homes, or other young trees around them
just beginning their lives and just beginning to firmly fasten new
young roots into the rocky soil at their base.
Looking carefully at Old Cotton Tree through the few green
living branches and slowly viewing from the base of the tree
to trees top, you would see that Old Cottonwood Tree
actually had no top. Old Cottonwood Trees top was gone.
Cut off cleanly, with a chain saw sometime in years past.
As other trees which had died were cut to the ground,
Old Cottonwood was spared full removal, and although now
stood, looking kind of funny in Summertime, still stood proud
showing the beautiful green leaves it could still produce.
Because of a hole in one side of this tree, where winter cold
caused a knot to split, loosen and fall out, forming a cave like
opening in the place where the knot had once been. This
small opening was the reason Old Cottonwood Tree still stood.
This was a home, a place of safety, a place to keep dry, a place
to find warmth, a reason for Old Cottonwood Tree.
There, up there, at the very top, sometime moving, a small,
very small, it’s a bushy tail flip flopping in excitement as it
chatter’s in warning to a huge Blackbirds to stay away.
A squirrel standing firm, guarding her home, saying this is
mine, go find your own. Then as the birds move on to a
new place to continue their noise, little squirrel moves from
top of Old Cottonwood, down, then crawls into the opening
which grandmother used, her mother used, and she now
uses to give birth and raise her young.
The home below in the middle of this tall stump has been
around for near fifty years, Old Cottonwood Tree, has been
here for so many years longer. The once taller, grand old
tree has been home to generation, after generation of
these small critters. Their play, running across fence tops,
across fresh mowed lawns, eating from dried ears of corn placed
out for them, has been a joy to observe.
Their favorite are the sunflower seeds. It is this
seed they take first, but if a unshelled peanut is mixed in
with the food placed out for them, they can be seen hiding the
peanut for a later eating. They always rush back to the black
sunflower seeds as this is the main course.
The old Cottonwood Tree still stands because of that hole,
that small cave in it’s side thirty feet above earth’s ground.
Home to little critter’s whose play has brought a little joy
to those whose home was built near their tree.
The little friends who are our neighbors who every year
begin life anew by giving birth and raising their babies in
their home in that Grand Old Cottonwood Tree.
No one ask for permission to disturb their lives, nor could they,
but the tree was here first, and will remain where it now stands
for many, many more years to come.
.