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Predictions

The Golden Hour, Tunnel View, Yosemite Valley (11/6/21) Elliot McGucken

About this time, each summer, Google Alerts sends links to articles containing “Fall Color.”

It’s fascinating to read these Google Alerts and learn whether fall color is being predicted to be early, late or about normal, and why prognosticators think so.

Most fall color forecasters are meteorologists who base their predictions on measured precipitation and temperatures. So far so good, but then they get out of their lane and guess what effect too little or too much rain, too warm or too cold autumn days might have on forthcoming foliage.

From years of observation, I’ve found that more or less precipitation tends to lengthen or shorten the display of fall color. It does not make it appear earlier or later. With more water, deciduous leaves last longer on branches. With less water, they dry up and fall off sooner.

It’s not water or lack of it that causes color change, it’s the seasonal change in temperature and light. As days shorten due to the Earth’s rotation, leaves get less light and nights become colder.

At first, the change is imperceptible, but then, gradually, the production of green chlorophyll slows and underlying yellows, oranges and reds emerge. Temperature intensifies or dulls fall color, but it does not make it appear earlier or later. Warm days and cold nights stimulate the most vibrant displays.

So, when is fall color predicted to appear?

  • Connecticut – one source says early, another says late, both agree that drought is the cause
  • Massachusetts – late
  • New England – Yankee magazine estimates it will peak in any time from Oct. 5 – 22 or Oct. 12 – 28 or even as late as early November.
  • Wyoming – normal (early to mid Sept., continuing to mid Oct.)
  • Ohio – late
  • Minnesota – early

As for California? It’s too early to say.

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Cat’s Meow

Juan rides a kitty box to North Lake (10/14/19) Jun Hong

Do not leave your cat at home when traveling to see California Fall Color.

Juan appreciates the fall color at North Lake (10/14/19) Jun Hong

That’s the advice of Jun Hong who took his kitty, Juan, to North Lake this past week. Clearly, Juan appreciates beauty.

Juan and Jun at North Lake (10/14/19) Jun Hong
  • North Lake, N Fork Bishop Creek Canyon – Peak to Past Peak, GO NOW, YOU ALMOST MISSED IT!
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Fall Fashion Trends

Here’s what every fashionista should know about what to wear or not, this autumn, from “A Fashion.”

“Shades of Orange” and “Merlot Wine Red,” are compatible with our view of fall’s colors, but “Guacamole Green?!” C’mon!

“White Coats” and “Light Blue” seem to be more valid as winter statements.

“Denim Dreams,” maybe. “Pale Pink,” definitely not.

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Orange Friday

El Dorado Hills (11/22/18) John Poimiroo

It began even before the whipped cream had lost its stiffness on yesterday’s pumpkin pies.

Families left Thanksgiving Day tables early last evening, packed blankets and folding chairs into the backs of SUVs and spent the night huddled along sidewalks waiting ’til dawn to be the first to see fall color.

An argument about who had first placed his folding chair on the sidewalk broke out in front of a particularly beautiful red maple.

Fists were swung. Police were called. Someone posted a cell phone picture on Twitter. It was not of the fight, but of the tree.

Soon, the #OrangeFriday photo was trending and a flash mob arrived to sing: 

The falling leaves drift by my window
The falling leaves of red and gold
I see your lips the summer kisses
The sunburned hands I used to hold

Since you went away the days grow long
And soon I’ll hear old winter’s song
But I miss you most of all my darling
When autumn leaves start to fall

Since you went away the days grow long
And soon I’ll hear old winter’s song
But I miss you most of all my darling
When autumn leaves start to fall

I miss you most of all my darling
When autumn leaves start to fall

Autumn Leaves lyrics © Universal Music Publishing Group