The Appless Tree
of all the trees I ever helped plant, it's probably still my favorite
Once upon a time
there was a woman who loved trees.
When she, her husband, & three boys
moved to a new home,
she decided to plant at least one new tree
in their yard every year.
By the time she & her husband had five boys,
their yard was a veritable forest.
Still, she kept planting trees.
One year she picked out a tree which had
three different types of apple branches.
It was four years old.
By the time it was seven
it would begin producing fruit.
She brought it home
& had her husband & sons
pick out a good place to plant it.
They searched
but could not find a single spot
where the sunlight would reach it.
Still, in an open spot,
they dug a hole, & planted it
between the swing set & the house,
near a towering cottonwood & pine.
They watered & fed it
& waited for the third year to come.
But when the third year came
there were no apples.
“Give it time,” they thought.
“Sometimes transplanting a tree sets it back a little.”
They waited a fourth year…,
…a fifth…,
…sixth…,
…seventh…,
…& tenth.
After fifteen years they decided
it was an “appless” tree.
Still, they enjoyed the tree,
though it did not help much in games
of hide & seek…,
…nor was it much good for climbing.
By now the family had grown
with one more boy & two little girls.
They spent hours playing tag around the tree
& trying to touch its leaves with their feet
while swinging.
They watched birds build their nests…
…& squirrels scamper through its branches.
And they marveled at the continued “appless-ness”
of their “appless” tree.
One spring,
after all of the children had grown & left home,
their father called each one to tell them
that their “appless” tree was covered with blossoms.
Even so, there were no apples.
Still, the “appless” tree continued to grow
until, finally, it grew tall enough to be kissed by the sun.
The next spring,
it was again covered in blossoms.
At long last, it bore fruit
—one single apple atop its highest branch
where it might at least for a moment each day
know the sun’s caress.
And then, the no-longer-“appless” tree
let its leaves fall…
…& died.
The next year
the husband/father cut down the tree for firewood.
As the family gathered for the holidays,
they enjoyed both the warmth of the fireplace
& sweet scent of apple wood.
The apple?
I like to think that
the birds, squirrels & field mice
shared its fruit…
& scattered its seeds,
many in places
with good soil
& plenty of sun…,
…such that by now
the apples produced
by that one “appless” tree
are too many to count.
About the Creator
Randy Wayne Jellison-Knock
Retired Ordained Elder in The United Methodist Church having served for a total of 30 years in Missouri, South Dakota & Kansas.
Born in Watertown, SD on 9/26/1959. Married to Sandra Jellison-Knock on 1/24/1986. One son, Keenan, deceased.



Comments (4)
Lovely story, beautiful words
I loved this. Read like a story with a lesson and made me glow reading it.
Beautiful, Randy
"Appless" was so creative. I too hope that a lotttt of apples are produced by the seeds of that one apple. Loved this!