But the second one, which had come up a month earlier: the little one that had sent up a few sets of leaves and then stopped, that had made me wonder if I had a natural dwarf on my hands and how good a small-yard tree that would be if it succeeded. Cool, right?
But you still have to grow at least some. And it wasn’t doing that anymore.
It couldn’t handle the 90-95F heat we’ve had this past week and day by day despite anything I could do it gradually crisped and died.
Wait, where was the kernel?
Somewhere along the way it had gotten jostled or something but broken off from the nourishment that’s supposed to send the shoot up and the roots down; with that support missing, it had still sent up leaves, it had still harnessed the immense power of the sun to add its tiny bit of oxygen to the earth, and it even had the tiniest nubs of roots trying to make it.
A little further down, there was the kernel, plumped and good and ready to help but unable to save it.
They both did the best they could for longer than I would have thought possible.
But I still have that plant’s two healthy tree-sisters, and they will show how apricoting from a perfect fruit is done.