I concur. It is an opportunity to learn what surrounds this land, and we have a great deal of time to spare; that is good, for the trees do not speak in haste or without deliberation. Perhaps they will call a druid who can tend to us, though it is doubtful any druid would attempt to take us for themselves; they have a knowledge of what is, and what is not, and to do so could endanger that which they hold dear. It is not a fault, but it is an obstacle nonetheless, and one I do not believe we wish to try and surmount; only one we should leave alone.
We should ask the trees and the forest for what information we might, and share our own tales in return. We shall nurture our divinity, and use the gift of the power the nature has offered us to assist in the growth of a single Kaihek tree, using two portions to aid it in it's growth, and a portion of our divine energy to assist as well. The Kaihek, when fed with the power it deserves, ensures the health and safety of a forest far past the time it has withered. While our simple two portions cannot hope to supply it's need for magic, it can give it, perhaps, enough of a push to start it's cycle of absorbing and recycling magic, so that it might attain the magnificent heights of it's ancient ancestors, given time. A young sapling, not far from our branch, will serve nicely, and perhaps become the centerpiece of the forest that will endure surrounding it, to bring a new generation of Kaihek trees into being.
This gift and return of power to the forest in a way it might not ever have been able to do should aid us by their gratitude. If we are lucky, they might grant us more of their natural energy, as we become attuned with it and cycle it back into the forest to help; as poor a conduit as we are, we are yet a conduit, focused in a way the forest could never be, and druids do not have the same divine power that we may offer. Perhaps, if none comes, the forest itself might aid us, in time.