03 Oct 05 - 10:51 AM (#1574582) Subject: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: MMario Where the heck is the fall foliage? As I drove to work this morning there was diddly-squat. The virginia creeper hasn't turned, the Sumac hasn't turned, there are minor spots of colour - but *nothing* like normal. Usually "peak" foliage season for this sectionb of NY falls somewhere in the first two weeks of October - but it is preceeded by several weeks of "spotty" change. Heck, some years the creeper and Sumac is brilliant red by the end of AUGUST! Where's the colour? |
03 Oct 05 - 11:04 AM (#1574600) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Rapparee The mountain maple has slashed the sides of the hills with scarlet as brilliant as blood on a pure white bandage. The yellow of the aspen hasn't yet mingled with the scarlet, but it will any time now, as the first fall of termination dust gleamed like diamonds on the mountains in this morning's sun. And the dark green of the juniper and pine agree well with the silver green of the sage. Drop around. |
03 Oct 05 - 11:19 AM (#1574619) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Janie Here in the "Southern Part of Heaven" it has been so dry for so long that some leaves are simply browning and dropping. We also haven't even had any cool weather, much less a frost. I don't think we are going to have much color in these parts this fall. I'm beginning to wonder if we are going to have "fall" at all. Janie;<( |
03 Oct 05 - 11:25 AM (#1574624) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: kendall Global warming? |
03 Oct 05 - 11:25 AM (#1574626) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: MMario no frost predicted for us until *maybe* the end of next week. we're supposed to get some 80 degree days this week! |
03 Oct 05 - 11:32 AM (#1574637) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Janie That's what I'm wondering, Kendall. Leo--what is your average first frost date? Janie |
03 Oct 05 - 11:37 AM (#1574647) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: MMario Sept. 20-something for average first frost - or do you mean first "killing frost"? which is October something I believe. |
03 Oct 05 - 12:09 PM (#1574681) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Janie Leo, either one or both (which you gave me.) Of course, where I live we grow a lot of things that are basically tropical or subtropical. The first frost, whether it is heavy or not, kills a bunch of stuff to the ground. Our average first frost date is mid October. Hard frost may not come until December. Weird weather year about everywhere, I think. Seems like our seasons and climate are increasingly unpredictable--no such thing as "normal" anymore. I'm more and more convinced we are undergoing significant climate change. Think we should bring long johns AND swimsuits to the Getaway? Janie |
03 Oct 05 - 12:46 PM (#1574710) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Ebbie I just checked the long rang weather forecast for Darlington, Maryland (Is that the closest weather station?) and it supposedly will remain very warm there until October 12th, when it cools into the 60s... Does that mean that the trend will continue and by the weekend the temperatures will be in the 40s-50s? Oh, woe is me. Juneau temps currently range from lows of 30 degrees to highs of 55-60. However, I don't sit around outdoors; brisk walking is encouraged. By the way, our colors are bright this year, interspersed among our conifers. The leaves are dry and brittle and make a wonderful scuffly sound. |
03 Oct 05 - 12:51 PM (#1574713) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Rapparee Our temps too, Ebbie. |
03 Oct 05 - 01:18 PM (#1574738) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Donuel Its peaking way upstate in NY. In MD there is really no trace of color. We have had times when the trees were bare by Halloween and times when the leaves still up after Thanksgiving. During the hurricaines we had no chem trails in the sky at all for over 2 weeks. Now they are back and more numerous than usual with pale blue grey skies as they spread out. |
03 Oct 05 - 02:33 PM (#1574791) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: GUEST,leeneia Years ago in school I was told that to get beautiful fall colors we need warm days and chilly nights. The warm days would encourage chemical activity in the leaves, and the chilly nights would reduce chlorophyll, letting the minor, and colorful, components be seen. |
03 Oct 05 - 02:45 PM (#1574805) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: MarkS Still too dry and too warm here in New Jersey. We will probably get nothing but a quick browning and fall without any color to speak of. I recall you need a spell of rain at just the right time before the change for the colors to be really spectacular. |
03 Oct 05 - 02:57 PM (#1574822) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Liz the Squeak It's starting to turn pretty here in the UK... Micca's virgina creeper is blushing red in the sun, mine is still green as grass. I'm driving down to the proper country tomorrow so I shall look out for the bracken turning gold as I go over the heathland in the New Forest. LTS |
03 Oct 05 - 04:25 PM (#1574895) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Mrs.Duck If the fall colours could wait a week or two and temperatures stay high I'd be very happy! |
03 Oct 05 - 04:27 PM (#1574897) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: MMario But we want the best of both worlds for your visit - Peak Autumn colour AND Indian Summer. |
04 Oct 05 - 12:48 AM (#1575196) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Ebbie KT informs me that the only crunchy, scuffly leaves I found the other day were those that she had attacked with her hair dryer. She claims that the only dry, brittle leaves around here are those on the basil plant in her kitchen. She would like more - much more - sun. She is a bitter woman. |
04 Oct 05 - 09:15 AM (#1575422) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: RangerSteve We haven't had much rain here in New Jersey for a while, and some trees here are shedding leaves without changing color. But my asters are blooming, and that makes up for the lack of leaf color. |
04 Oct 05 - 09:30 AM (#1575437) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: jaze Oh Liz, that sounds so poetic. Can I come for the ride? |
04 Oct 05 - 10:14 AM (#1575466) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Janie On the way into Camp Ramblewood, there is a house that always has an incredible bank of mixed chrysanthemums right along a stone wall on the road. I always look for it. I am not a big mum fan, but this is truly lovely. Keep your eyes peeled if you ae going to the Getaway! Janie |
03 Oct 16 - 05:03 PM (#3812593) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: keberoxu We are getting it going around here, in any case. The maples are working the whole spectrum: some die-hard maple leaves remain green while others go yellow or red. Those vine leaves are flaming as well. |
03 Oct 16 - 05:18 PM (#3812598) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Senoufou Far too warm here in Eastern England for any autumn foliage yet. |
03 Oct 16 - 07:39 PM (#3812630) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Donuel 0 in DC This year being the hottest global average temp in written history, Kendal was right ahead of time. |
04 Oct 16 - 10:30 AM (#3812682) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Stu Here in the lea of the Peak District the colours are starting nicely. |
04 Oct 16 - 10:43 AM (#3812686) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Steve Shaw A good frost is paramount when it comes to autumn colour. One of the few downsides of living in Cornwall is that we rarely get frost in autumn. By the time we get a good chill we've had a gale or two and most of the leaves have gone (a lot of 'em into my leafmould heap). Good crops of berries this year to keep the birds going. My flower garden is still looking pretty good. |
04 Oct 16 - 11:10 AM (#3812691) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: bbc In the U.S.--starting in Connecticut, Massachusetts, & New York. Lovely! Barbara |
04 Oct 16 - 12:31 PM (#3812706) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Senoufou We have noticed a good crop of berries here too Steve. Do you think it means we shall have a hard winter after the long, hot summer? (I've just ordered some more heating oil, just in case!) |
04 Oct 16 - 04:36 PM (#3812759) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: gnu Leaves turn colour based on the amount of daylight per day but warm temperatures can delay the turn for about a week, tops. Please note that Mother Nature has her own calendar and the full moon is shortly after midnight on the 16th. I don't know if she is a member of Mudcat or not. If so, PM her and ask. |
05 Oct 16 - 10:36 AM (#3812897) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Charmion No frost here, yet -- most unusual. Normally, the first frost comes on the heels of the Equinox. Today's forecast high is 24 Celsius -- unheard-of. Thanks for the datum on what triggers the change of colour, gnu. Now, why does my neighbour's ornamental cherry start turning red in August? (My money's on air pollution; the poor thing is downwind of three bus stops serving three routes.) |
05 Oct 16 - 10:52 AM (#3812900) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Steve Shaw A good berry crop is simply a sign that the trees have had a good spring and summer with excellent pollination success. Nothing else! |
05 Oct 16 - 11:07 AM (#3812901) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Steve Shaw Whilst gnu is correct in linking daylight to leaf-fall, according to species there is considerable environmental input when it comes to colour. Water availability, or lack of it, in summer and low autumn temperatures can have an impact on colour. A tree sheds leaves in autumn because they would be a liability in winter - too little light to help them to do their job, too much exposure to damage caused by severe weather, worsened physiological drought caused by water loss from leaves in hard frosts, fully-laden trees more susceptible to being blown down, etc. Trees that keep their leaves in winter have strategies such as waxy leaf cuticles, thick epidermises, sunken stomata and reduced individual leaf area (though more actual leaves, as in conifers). Their branches may be so disposed as to shed snow more easily. Obviously, not having to replace all your leaves at once in spring saves energy. Evergreen trees do lose leaves but in a constant trickle. Leaf-fall is also the way trees get rid of some waste products such as tannins and calcium oxalate. Leaf-fall is a tree's way of going to the toilet. They get away with doing it in public in a way that neither you nor I ever could. |
05 Oct 16 - 11:08 AM (#3812902) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Steve Shaw I meant daylength, not daylight, in my first line. Damn that autocorrect rubbish. |
05 Oct 16 - 06:35 PM (#3812970) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: keberoxu Today there was a metal rake for dead leaves, lying smack dab in the middle of my lane on the highway. Thankfully my car was able to pass over the rake with the tires on either side of the tines... |
05 Oct 16 - 07:37 PM (#3812978) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Steve Shaw I never let dead leaves lie. I rake them up ad stack them, though not on their own which would mean waiting at least two years for usable leaf mould. I stack the leaves with the abundant grass clippings that my large garden yields. That way, I get a really good compost in six months. Bob Flowerdew calls it accelerated leaf mould. I have access to abundant leaves and so much lawn clipping that it's my chief source of organic matter. Can't afford to be lazy in autumn - gotta get out there and rake up them leaves! |
06 Oct 16 - 01:57 PM (#3813125) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: leeneia Last year the DH and I took a foliage cruise on the Hudson. The colors were wonderful. The cruise took place at the end of October, not the beginning. When I was a kid, I learned that warm days and cool nights produce the best colors. |
06 Oct 16 - 02:38 PM (#3813133) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Senoufou Oh I just love Bob Flowerdew Steve. He used to be on Gardeners' Question Time on Radio 4 (He may still be) Very organic in his methods. He also has a rather nice long plait. Doesn't he live in Norfolk somewhere? (I ought to know, as I live there myself!) |
06 Oct 16 - 02:42 PM (#3813134) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Senoufou Just looked it up. Yes, he lives in Dickleburgh, South Norfolk. (All the best people live here you know) |
06 Oct 16 - 04:33 PM (#3813152) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Steve Shaw Norfolk 'n' good, eh? 😉 |
06 Oct 16 - 05:56 PM (#3813168) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Senoufou Hahaha! Yes, we're Norfolk n' good Steve! |
20 Sep 18 - 12:45 PM (#3951812) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: keberoxu Today for the first time I noticed that one maple tree is furtively sporting some of those intense dark red leaves in the midst of a full green foliage. The summer stayed so hot for so long, and humid as well, that signs of autumn are doubly welcome here. The nights are now cooling down, so that will help bring in the autumn colors on the trees. |
20 Sep 18 - 01:33 PM (#3951821) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Iains Most of the fall foliage near me has gone a good few miles down the road after the recent gales. Some species of tree started changing colour back in August, presumably from heat and drought stress. |
20 Sep 18 - 06:28 PM (#3951872) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: JennieG In Ontario, Canada - I am hoping! We'll be there in less than a fortnight. |
20 Sep 18 - 07:41 PM (#3951877) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Joe Offer Dang. I was planning to make a drive across the U.S. to see the foliage this year, but I ended up with obligations that made me cancel the trip. We do have some fall color here in California, but not like "Back East." The aspens in the eastern Sierra are a spectacular yellow, and the cities have some ornamental trees that turn pretty colors. My Japanese maples will be very nice. -Joe- |
22 Sep 18 - 08:30 AM (#3952140) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: ranger1 Joe, it's not going to be a superb foliage year, so don't feel bad. Drought conditions in the Northeast for most of the spring and summer are going to cause things to be fairly drab here. We're getting a lot of leaf drop before it changes color, or the leaves are going straight to brown. We'll see some color, but nothing like we would have if we'd had decent rainfall. |
22 Sep 18 - 09:51 AM (#3952144) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Stilly River Sage The leaves are beginning to fall without making much color change here, but then North Texas isn't noted for it's colorful autumn weather. The most amazing autumn color I saw on a road trip, Joe, was when I drove from Texas to Washington, taking various secondary state highways past national parks. By the time I got to Colorado's Berthoud Pass (whew!) via Route 40 and heading through Utah to Dinosaur and other parks, I was seeing glorious high plateau stands of birch or aspen with white trunks and vivid yellow along the edges of rivers or lakes. I cut over to 395 in Northern California and 139 to 39 to stay on the high plains to the east of Lassen and Shasta and the incredible beauty of those high elevation lakes and forests. I'm pretty sure that was the trip where I also went up through Central Oregon, east of the Cascades, and at Goldendale, Washington, headed up over Blewett Pass that was simply perfect, no other traffic, glorious sunny day, black road with bright yellow lines and trees that were just as yellow as the stripe, but living things stirring in the light breeze in all their glory. I finally joined up with I-90 and headed over Snoqualmie into Seattle. I must have made this drive in about 1983, so some things will have changed along the route, but the terrain, the season, the routes are all still there. Think about a tour like that, Joe. I didn't take any photos, I wanted to just look at it all and remember the beauty. Sometimes when you mediate through a lens the memories aren't as clear because you're unintentionally letting the film do your remembering. Another perk of visiting Dinosaur that time of year - it was empty. And I drove up to a picnic area (I can't find it on the map but the drive off of the highway of a mile or so took me to a perch perhaps 1000 feet above the valley) where there was no sound. Nothing. No wind, no birds, no insects, no other people. It was like a roar in my ears, my brain trying to hear something up there. My own breathing, my footsteps, sounds as I prepared lunch. As I continued the drive it was hunting season so I was careful as I drove into the Heber City area and through that canyon, there were lots of trucks and hunters in orange vests. I had my fingers crossed that none of them would be shooting near or across the highway. Perhaps next time I head up to Washington I'll try to reproduce that route. |
23 Sep 18 - 10:58 AM (#3952298) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Charmion The fall foliage is on the trees, except for the bits of it that need sweeping off our deck. Save a couple of years in Germany, I have lived my whole life in areas so noted for fall colour that in October the roads are cluttered with tour buses loaded with leaf-peepers. I enjoy the colours on a sunny day like today, but sooner or later the wind and rain bring the leaves down in slimy heaps on the deck and the driveway. Like they say, sic transit gloria mundi, which can be translated: Today's tourist attraction, tomorrow's housekeeping problem. Sigh. |
24 Sep 18 - 04:25 PM (#3952566) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Donuel An FDR era road called Skyline drive is the place us leaf peepers go. There are no houses there. |
25 Sep 18 - 06:35 PM (#3952838) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: keberoxu What with all the rain of the last weeks, seems the Northeast is making up for lost time. Things are intensely green hereabouts. |
25 Sep 18 - 06:48 PM (#3952841) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Stilly River Sage I've driven through the hardwood forests in Arkanasas, in Kentucky, in Pennsylvania various years, and up in the Catskills and out on Long Island other years and been there in time for wonderful fall color. Good thing they're spread out so not everyone and his brother ends up on the National Park roadways. |
25 Sep 18 - 07:01 PM (#3952844) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Donuel Rap, blood and diamonds are not my thing. Stained bandages YUCK |
25 Sep 18 - 08:29 PM (#3952858) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: ChanteyLass I'll be driving to the Portsmouth Maritime Folk Festival in New Hampshire this weekend and to the Berkshires in western Massachusetts next weekend. Neither trip was planned because of the fall foliage, but I'm hoping to see some color along the way. |
26 Sep 18 - 10:05 AM (#3952941) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Stilly River Sage We're in such a depressing cycle of heavy rain and winds that our leaves don't stand a chance, they'll simply be knocked out of the trees and drift up along the curb. I'm in an area where several neighbors big trees drop leaves that land in my yard (I have pines out front). I rake most of them up onto the turf and mulch them in, there's nothing to drive by to enjoy. |
29 Sep 18 - 09:53 AM (#3953595) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Donuel In London you can see splendid colour by taking the treetop walk at Kew Gardens. If you wait till Bonfire night you might see them at their peak. |
29 Sep 18 - 12:57 PM (#3953624) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: keberoxu The maples are turning on the colors. [colours] |
01 Oct 18 - 09:38 PM (#3954134) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Donuel From drought the leaves fall early with less color. In really wet conditions the trees will wait longer with more color and wide growth season rings. There is less than 1% color in DC |
02 Oct 18 - 10:51 AM (#3954219) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Stilly River Sage You have to click on the calendar with today's date to see how the leaves have progressed. And this is only New England. |
02 Oct 18 - 04:48 PM (#3954267) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: ChanteyLass Stilly, I love that calendar! I now understand why I didn't see much color in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, over the weekend. It looks like I'll see a bit more in western Massachusetts this coming weekend. Best of all, I'll be home when it peaks in Rhode Island. |
05 Oct 18 - 04:24 PM (#3954982) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: keberoxu Tamson/Ranger1 's earlier post is on the money. I reserved judgment to watch what happened, and the post is right. Only, there's detail to it. It's true that the trees that tend to be gentle and quiet about turning color, are defaulting to no color, mostly. The maples, on the other hand, have no competition and their flaming colors stand out like sore thumbs these days. |
08 Oct 18 - 03:28 PM (#3955494) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: keberoxu The limited leaf color this autumn continues to progress. The red and pink and oranges of the maples, and of various ornamental trees and creeping vines, were the first to show up, starting in September. It is only this week that I am seeing the golden yellow that always makes autumn autumn to me. The yellow / golden leaves were slow to get started. We still have a lot of green on the trees. A few trees are beginning to brown out. Not much just yet in the way of falling leaves, but that will change. For one thing there has been rather little wind. A brisk autumn wind would alter the picture. |
11 Oct 18 - 01:18 PM (#3956100) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Stilly River Sage I took a houseguest on a drive around the county yesterday here in North Texas. We don't get vivid colors like the northeast, but the trees are starting to turn, offering some pleasant hues along the roadside. When there are lots of different types of green in view it is quite pretty. |
11 Oct 18 - 04:44 PM (#3956134) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Bill D Leaves here (suburb of DC) are going from green to brown and then onto my roof & yard. There are a couple of Maple trees that haven't decided yet, but the temp. is supposed to drop 20°F this weekend. Fall is about here however it shows itself. |
11 Oct 18 - 05:24 PM (#3956146) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Joe Offer Most of our trees in the Sierra Foothills are conifers, so we don't have dramatic fall color. Still, it's a very pretty time of year. We've had a bit of rain to clear the air and settle the dust, and many of the plants on the ground are turning various shades of brown. Just now, we drove from our home at 2300 feet to the mining town of Dutch Flat at 3100 feet, and it was a lovely drive through very rugged territory. -Joe- |
11 Oct 18 - 06:42 PM (#3956158) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Nigel Parsons Looked pretty good from the Kankamagus Highway this last week. I'm just back from a road trip (by plane & coach): UK => Dublin => Boston (Mass.). Then Boston 2 days (Including guided tours of Boston, visits to Harvard & to Cape Cod) Then on: => Salem, Gloucester, Rockport => Lake Winnipesaukee, The Kankamagus Highway,=> North Conway, Vermont, Stowe => Montreal (two nights)including a (long) day trip to Quebec. Then leaving Montreal for Ottawa & Toronto (2 nights) including a visit to Niagara (Canadian side) before flying back to UK. A great holiday, and the 'fall colours' were amazing. |
13 Oct 18 - 02:59 PM (#3956471) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: keberoxu The leaves are leaving the trees for the ground, at last. |
13 Oct 18 - 06:30 PM (#3956498) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Bat Goddess ChanteyLass, we still have only fair to middlin' color (if that). I'm a half hour inland from Portsmouth, NH (and uphill). My house is towards the front of a 33 acre piece of woods. I'm surrounded by trees. Halfway down the hill (about a half mile) the houses peter out and it's just trees (except for the slash of the power lines). Up until earlier this week, most of my trees were still green. The American Basswood had just started dropping its yellow leaves. It's usually the earliest to shed its leaves. Right now most of the trees are gold (with some still green) but maple leaves are starting to seriously litter my driveway and deck. Not a speck of red -- they're all yellow with brown spots and shrivel quickly into brown. The only color in the neighborhood are the ancient maples in my up the hill neighbor's yard -- and that's more of a dusty maroon red, rather than their usual bright red, orange and touch of gold. Even the color in the marshy area up around the corner (mile and a half from me) is "dusty"...dull reddish and orange-ish. Not a good year for color. Last year wasn't either, but it was better than this year. And this year I've lost two hemlocks to drought stress. New Hampshire is losing a lot of conifers to drought stress because of their shallow root systems. What I've been noticing is if there's a stand of three conifers, one may be doing just fine, but the other two are losing needles and looking bedraggled, if not actually dead. There are some bright spots of color on my drive to Portsmouth (or north to Tilton), but not the kind of color leaf peepers have traditionally traveled here to see. We've been in a drought for over three years. We get rain, but it's not long soaking rains. This summer it's either been a torrential downpour and then over, or a teaser rain just wet enough to mess up outdoor plans without actually helping the garden much. It's certainly been HUMID, though! Alas, that doesn't do the trees much good. My Trex deck is slimy, the handrails on the steps haven't been dry since June, and my white metal screen door is green. Nigel, I'm glad you were able to visit areas where there WAS good color. (It's there, but not in the profusion of years past.) I'm about an hour and twenty minutes north of Boston and about the same distance south of the west end of the Kancamagus. Linn |
16 Oct 18 - 05:13 PM (#3956978) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: keberoxu falling, falling, falling ... |
16 Oct 18 - 06:14 PM (#3956994) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Donuel its in Maine |
18 Oct 18 - 11:11 PM (#3957357) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: ChanteyLass Here in RI, I'm still waiting. Thanks for the NH update, Linn. I've been away from this site for a while. I hope things have brightened since you posted. Nigel Parsons, my ex recently posted an aerial pic of the Kancamagus Highway. I'm glad you got to visit this area when it was dressed in all its glory! |
01 Oct 19 - 02:15 PM (#4011454) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: keberoxu Can't speak for Northern New England, as I'm west of Boston, in the southern half of New England. There is autumn color in the leaves now, and having said that, it isn't a lot of color. Yet. More green in the trees than anything else. Temperatures are shifting at last, though. The autumn equinox was embarrassingly warm here, and it has been rainy. With the chillier nights, the autumn foliage colors ought to come out to play pretty soon. |
02 Oct 19 - 01:08 AM (#4011518) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: leeneia in school I learned that fall color depends on warm days and cool nights. Where I live, we've had hot weather until a few days ago. I don't know if we'll have much of a display this year. |
04 Oct 19 - 09:21 PM (#4011966) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Kingwood Kowboy It's in Colorado's Rocky Mtn Nat'l Park. Friday 10-04-2019 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xS2g2DEvGZA |
06 Oct 19 - 05:07 PM (#4012255) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: keberoxu I'm kind of giving up on fall colors here, I think when the leaves do fall eventually they will either be green, brown, or shrivelled dirty yellow, not the vivid foliage colors of other past years. Even the maples can't do more than turn a small part of the leaves on their own trees. Like a whimper more than a bang. |
08 Oct 19 - 01:55 PM (#4012562) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: EBarnacle I was walking out the other day and saw piles of fallen leaves but no color here in Central NJ. |
08 Oct 19 - 02:53 PM (#4012571) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: keberoxu A cold night or two -- above freezing, I know, but cold for all that -- and BANG! The maples have dropped their chlorophyll, just like that. Even one big old oak tree is getting in the act; I mistook the oak, from a distance, for a maple, and then I got closer and saw the shapes of the leaves. |
12 Oct 19 - 12:41 PM (#4013241) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: keberoxu refresh |
12 Oct 19 - 01:42 PM (#4013252) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: MickyMan I walked 12 miles of the Appalachian Trail through CT USA yesterday (Friday OCT 11), and it was GLORIOUS! The colors are certainly in the Berkshires! |
12 Oct 19 - 08:50 PM (#4013305) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: ChanteyLass Here in RI, I'm starting to worry that we'll have yet another summer when rain and wind will cause the leaves to fall before they reach their peak. The last 3 days have been miserable--not the rain so much as the wind that almost knocks me over, sends unsecured grocery carts skittering across parking lots, makes opening a car door and keeping it open difficult, etc. |
19 Sep 24 - 06:08 PM (#4208610) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: keberoxu The first day of autumn is not that far away, are people seeing any colorful trees yet? |
24 Sep 24 - 03:34 PM (#4208801) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: keberoxu The maples are starting to turn color now. |
25 Sep 24 - 03:30 PM (#4208847) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: AllisonA(Animaterra) The leaves are well under way here in the geographical center of Maine. |
02 Oct 24 - 11:47 AM (#4209195) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: keberoxu The local crabapple tree is dropping its loads of ripe crabapples. IT happens to be located between a sidewalk and a driveway, and now both are littered with mushed-up crabapples, a menace to walk on. |
08 Oct 24 - 07:21 PM (#4209462) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: keberoxu The Leaf Peepers are making their pilgrimages to New England in their tour buses now. Meanwhile in New Mexico, a friend sent a photo to me of the golden aspens in the mountains. |
10 Oct 24 - 04:19 PM (#4209583) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: keberoxu Now the winds, true autumn winds, are picking up, and bringing down the leaves in great quantities. |
10 Oct 24 - 06:44 PM (#4209591) Subject: RE: BS: where is the Fall Foliage? From: Thompson Keboroxu, if you have a ladder (and someone to hold it) and a shopping bag, crab apples are delicious if you pick them, de-stem them, chop them up and make an open tart with them about now, before they've really formed any core. Of course, you can also make apple jelly but that requires a certain amount of foostering round. And if anyone in the neighbourhood has a deck brush it would be a lovely favour to the neighbours to sweep up the mushed crabs, and maybe donate them to someone who keeps hens, who'll be crazy about them. (The hens crazy about the apples, not the henkeeper crazy about either apples or hens.) |