Cocklebur seed takes root in Texas man’s arm
Published 4:00 pm Thursday, January 13, 2011
- Justin Martin points out where a cocklebur seed rooted in an arm wound he suffered in a May 2007 car accident. The seed sprouted and had to be surgically removed about a year later.
It’s been said that mighty oaks can grow from even the tiniest acorns. Justin Martin can attest to that, though in his case, it was a tiny cocklebur that changed his life by growing in a very unusual place.
It’s been nearly four years since an accident that came close to taking Martin’s life. That May 2007 evening he was driving down a rural Texas road when a cow appeared and he lost control of his vehicle. The car rolled so furiously Martin was ejected.
“My pelvis was broken, the ligaments were torn out of one knee and this arm was torn up,” he said, pushing up his left sleeve to reveal a wide scar more than 1 foot long. “The surgeons said if the cuts had been just a half inch to the left, I would have lost the use of the arm.”
A series of surgeries to undo the damage followed, then physical therapy. After several months, however, a painful, marble-like lump developed on Martin’s left arm. In June 2008, the decision was made to surgically remove it for biopsy.
“Later they told me that the doctors in the room that day had a total of 100 years experience and none of them had ever seen anything like what they found,” Martin said.
The lump, it turned out, was a plant. Evidently a cocklebur had become embedded in the deep cuts on Martin’s arm the night of the accident; it eventually migrated to a spot about 6 inches away.
Even more remarkably, because it was close enough to the surface of the skin to get light, the seed had sprouted.
“They said it didn’t have any color because there wasn’t enough light for it to make chlorophyll,” said Martin, who was anesthetized during the procedure.
Every day since then, the 26-year-old Wichita Falls, Texas resident said, has been faced with a new appreciation for life and its many blessings
There has, however, been a unique reminder of his extraordinary extraction.
The story of Martin’s sprouted bur made its way into the United Kingdom’s 2010 edition of “Ripley’s Believe It or Not!” It next appeared in one of Ripley’s single-panel cartoons in the San Antonio Express-News.
Now the tale has been featured in “Ripley’s Believe it or Not! Special Edition 2011.” Published by Scholastic, the book is directed at younger readers and full of other odd facts.
Martin is featured on the same page with case where doctors found botfly larva under a man’s scalp and another about the removal of a giant roundworm from a Kenyan child.
Today, Martin says he’s back on track for the plan he had the night of the accident: going to culinary school. He has become a dedicated community volunteer, including delivering Meals on Wheels.
“I’ve realized how important it is to give back to folks who are less fortunate. And I’ve come to understand how something like this can be a new beginning rather than an end.”
But he does have one regret: “I wish (the doctors) could have saved (the sprouted plant) for me.”