![](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_vWch6jI2kiqSP8KY1iF2ykWu0cERTYtuu-lioaKrnwAqgHpkAvNuoDJuM25rxB3LB2VITO_FqLIW4OJPD45cX3MbSTvIR6BzwWfo6wSRyuZGLa3dG3wVYvQb7SVRCWr2ELyHhtrInJ_dGFsz6CCMbXXRRxwM2g7cfeL7nE9_vFNmdIZSahYEt8TL7SmGQEauxhK2ecRUs4h9oL7z16Kpk=s0-d)
On the weekend of February 18/19, while tending to some yard work, I noticed something buried in a stone retaining wall. It looked odd, not like the other stones stacked to form the wall. When I took it out, it fell in two, so perfectly that it must have been previously cut. Regardless, it looked like wood... old rotten wood, but was as hard as a rock, literally. I knew what I thought it was, but I waited for my wife, the biologist, to come home and verify my conclusions. Upon her arrival, I anxiously brought her over to it and asked her to identify this specimen. She said, "Is this... no..., yes, yes, this a petrified piece of wood?!"
![](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_uu-X_lhOzZwS-Bj8MBJenexN3ZsIwf1XcdNzuyLH8d6V4TxPZ1E-7Uhstj-KPXfdpw5oBUvNrwTHrO3U-97x-hIQiG8F3qCA9a9UHPjrMIIlM_Hq6IpInJULXvoM-KqC4pXihqheBkeSDodGYKH331T56jSKAIXapNA4EVLiRIq1-eLV3tQs4jxQg0ujww14qOpJAwIAGBUUtpw99vzDY=s0-d)
We both stood there astonished. This hunk of stone, I mean wood, sat hidden in the retaining wall for at least 100 years, becoming, well, a hunk of stone (according to Wikipedia.com, wood takes a minimum of 100 years to become petrified). Due to the clean cut, my suspicion is more that a previous owner had it on display in the garden, forgot about it where it was lost to time until, in my boredom, I dug it out of the wall.
Either way, my home is just awesome! I find things in the backyard that are just amazing!