Promotional image for “Home Country with Slim Randles,” featuring an older man with a white beard, glasses, and cowboy hat smiling beside a country scene with a red truck.

Home Country

Slim Randles

When old Joe Gilliam began digging that hole in his front yard, out there close

to the street, neighbors watched and wondered. When he got his grandson to help

him carry the shade tree sapling from his pickup to the hole, people nodded.

Mystery solved. Old Joe’s planting a tree.

After removing the root mass from the five-gallon pot, the grandson disappeared

and Old Joe was left to care for the baby tree. He carefully spread the tiny feeder

roots out and tucked them in with soil. Then he packed more dirt around the tree’s

base and soaked it well with the hose.

No one else saw anything odd in Joe planting that tree, either, but Joe’s been

retired now going on 20 years. He’s old and getting more frail each year. By the

time that sapling gets large enough to give homes to squirrels and birds and shade

to neighbors and a resting place for dogs, Joe will have been long gone.

Planting a tree is an affirmation of faith in the future. It is a gift to those yet

unborn. It is a legacy of goodness, an old man’s prayer.

—————

Brought to you by “The Long Dark,” a novel of Alaska by Slim Randles.


About

Mark Pettus is Publisher of The Chattahoochee News-Herald & Sneads Sentinel. He can be reached at mark.pettus@prioritynews.net


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