Doorbell rings while I’m still in robe and slippers, working through the in-box’s overnight accumulations.
Sighing, I rise and pad to the front door to find a chipper, orange-vested young man from the utility company, the descendant of guys who annually appear, once upon a time bearing clipboard and pen and paper—now with small electronic tablet in hand.
“Ah, tree time,” I think, even before Micah introduces himself as the arborist. “Wonderful!” I say to this tree guy who has come to inspect the leafy growth swaddling the trapeze-like lines that swoop from tall poles to my house.
Walking to the back yard, we chat, we two dendrophiles, delighted by each other’s enthusiasm for trees.
“Sure,” he says, “we can remove that volunteer fig. You want those ficus out?”
Yes, I do. And then Micah offers a professional assessment that makes me beam like a proud parent:
“Your sycamore is in great shape.”
As if I’ve had much to do with this towering sentinel that’s watched over this house for close to a century.
“I’ve had it trimmed regularly, and I water it through summer,” I say to Micah’s approving nods. “Any other suggestions?”
He shakes his head. “She looks good,” he says.
And, as we both walk to the driveway, I decide that I will take that compliment on behalf of the sycamore and myself, delighted by the conversation with the young tree guy
who, whether out of kindness or professional obligation, chatted up an old robe-and-slipper’d gal about trees on a sparkling May morning just because we love them.