A bumble bee works on a cherry tree Monday in front of Connie Grenier’s home on Cook Street in Auburn. “We had some really big trees here that my son planted when he was young, and when he was deployed in Desert Storm the city redid the street and cut them down. They replaced them with these three beautiful trees that are spectacular this year. They seem to have a different shade of pink every year,” she said. Russ Dillingham/Sun Journal

A bumble bee works on a cherry tree Monday in front of Connie Grenier’s home on Cook Street in Auburn. “We had some really big trees here that my son planted when he was young, and when he was deployed in Desert Storm the city redid the street and cut them down. They replaced them with these three beautiful trees that are spectacular this year. They seem to have a different shade of pink every year,” she said. Russ Dillingham/Sun Journal

A bumble bee works on a cherry tree Monday in front of Connie Grenier’s home on Cook Street in Auburn. “We had some really big trees here that my son planted when he was young, and when he was deployed in Desert Storm the city redid the street and cut them down. They replaced them with these three beautiful trees that are spectacular this year. They seem to have a different shade of pink every year,” she said. Russ Dillingham/Sun Journal

A bumble bee works on a cherry tree Monday in front of Connie Grenier’s home on Cook Street in Auburn. “We had some really big trees here that my son planted when he was young, and when he was deployed in Desert Storm the city redid the street and cut them down. They replaced them with these three beautiful trees that are spectacular this year. They seem to have a different shade of pink every year,” she said. Russ Dillingham/Sun Journal


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