I have recently written about adding a new Cercis to my garden: canadensis Eternal Flame. As one moves in, sadly another has had to move on.
This story starts ten years ago when the garden, and I, was younger than we are now. I bought a rather lovely Cercis siliquastrum Lavender Twist. I planted the tree and loved the tree and a dog got into the garden and snapped the young tree about 3 inches from the ground. I wept, I railed, I went straight out and bought another Cercis. I could not find another Lavender Twist so I bought a Cercis chinensis 'Avondale'. What a wonderful tree this turned out to be. It grew quickly, it grew well. It flowered fairly soon after planting and.....
it developed a lean. A serious lean. Yes I had staked it but it rejected its stake and made a bid to live at its own angle. I knew one day this would mean it would have to go but I pretended I could not see it
Such pretence is always doomed to failure. Everytime I had to bend a little to walk by it I knew I had to deal with it.
It has benefitted from being planted in the right place and whilst it did not flower quite so quickly, it has been a good tree. It clearly has the will to survive. This tree has rather lovely fresh green leaves which might mean it is more overlooked than its brightly coloured cousins, but it is not, in my opinion, a tree to overlook.
and then, without warning, the mood was upon me. I often say the garden tells me what to do and the garden shouted very loudly "sort that bloody tree out!"
Firstly I removed the upper branches, rather than just toppling the tree. I stood back and wondered if I should leave it like this for a bit to see what I thought.
I thought it was leaning and would not make itself stop leaning and that I should stop putting off the inevitable.
A few moments later and it was gone. The stump of the Prunus Beni-chidori was also gone. The Prunus died last winter, but I left it hoping that it might not really be dead. It was really dead.