Is nature vengeful?
@allknowing (153530)
India
August 30, 2023 12:14am CST
I admire nature and her artistic ability when it comes to our garden There is never a day I do not see her work of art
But on thing bothers me. We had yielding guava trees. We used to get many guavas in that we sometimes let them fall and never picked them up. These trees died and now no matter how many saplings we plant they just do not grow.
Did nature expect us to respect and not throw away fruits? Just saying
4 people like this
5 responses

@rsa101 (40976)
• Philippines
30 Aug 23
@allknowing I suspect that there is something in your soil that made it unsuitable for guavas to thrive. Mother nature will only respond when you do something and will never be vengeful since what you do to her will affect the outcome.
1 person likes this
@allknowing (153530)
• India
30 Aug 23
I can say I have a bit of knowledge on this but I simply do not understand why they do not thrive any more.
1 person likes this

@DaddyEvil (174500)
• United States
30 Aug 23
If Mother Nature didn't want the fruit to fall on the ground and feed the worms, then the trees would never release the fruit from their branches.
1 person likes this
@allknowing (153530)
• India
30 Aug 23
You have a point. I have given up trying to decipher her logic.
1 person likes this
@crazyhorseladycx (39503)
• United States
9 Oct 23
i saw'n the comments that'cha got steered'n the proper direction. sunlight 'tis essential fer guava trees. but, if'n 't helps 't all, i've struggled to keep much 'f anythin' thrivin' here. drought, grasshoppers, triple digit heat...






