
This year fall seemed to come overnight, like someone flipped a switch. One day there was no color and the next day I saw it everywhere on my drive to work. Since we are in the middle of a drought nobody knew what fall would bring, and indeed I saw a lot of dry brown leaves falling from the trees, but generally the colors have been fine even if it isn’t quite as spectacular as years past. The hard part from a photography standpoint is that everything seems to be changing at once rather than staggered as it usually is. This shot shows the trees, birch and maple I think, that grow on the ledges at a local dam. I think it’s a beautiful scene.

Usually cinnamon ferns turn pumpkin orange in the fall but either I missed the orange phase or they went right to yellow. In any event they’re beautiful when the cover a forest floor like this. Each one is about waist high and three or four feet across.

I call this one “fisherman’s bliss.” Do you see him there in his little boat?

I can’t imagine fall without maples. They’re gloriously beautiful trees that change to yellows, reds, and oranges.

Up close maple leaves often aren’t that spectacular but clothe an entire tree in them and they become…

…breathtakingly beautiful.

This is a stream I drive by every morning. The sun had just come over the hills.

Ash is another tree that comes in many colors, including deep purple.

Fringed loosestrife (Lysimachia ciliata) also turned purple.

Poison ivy (Toxicodendron radicans) has turned red just about everywhere I‘ve been. It often turns yellow in the fall and red can be hard to find, but not this year.

Some of the beeches seem to be turning much earlier than they usually do. I count on seeing them in their full fall glory on Halloween.

This view is from along the Ashuelot River in Keene where mostly red and silver maples grow. You can always count on finding good fall color here.

The invasive burning bushes (Euonymus alatus) along the Ashuelot River will go from green to red, and then will finally become a soft pastel pink to almost white. Right now they’re in their loud orange / red / yellow / magenta stage. It’s too bad they’re so invasive because they really are beautiful, but they dominate the understory and create so much shade nothing else can grow.

What I believe is Miscanthus grass was very beautiful in the afternoon light.

This shot of roadside asters is for all of you who expected to see a flower post today. Our roadside flowers are passing quickly now but I hope to find enough for another post or two.

Staghorn sumac (Rhus typhina) is beautifully red this year.

Our native dogwoods can turn everything from yellow to red to orange to deep purple, sometimes all on the same bush.

Lady ferns (Athyrium filix-femina) are one of the first ferns to turn in the fall but this year they seem to be lagging behind in places. They’ll go from yellow to white before turning brown.

Sensitive fern (Onoclea sensibilis) is a good indicator of moist places and often one of the first ferns to turn white in the fall. Its common name comes from its sensitivity to frost, which was first noticed by the early colonials. Turkeys will peck at and eat the sori in the winter, and that is why sometimes you find the fern’s spores lying on the snow around the plant.

You don’t expect blue to be a fall color but a very beautiful shade of blue is there on the stems of black raspberry.

Virginia creeper vines (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) climb high in the trees to reach as much sunshine as they can. They aren’t noticed for most of the year but when their leaves start to turn they can’t be ignored. Virginia creeper’s blue berries are poisonous to humans but many birds and small animals eat them. This vine had only one berry left, that I could see. My mother loved this vine enough to grow it on the side of the house I grew up in. It shaded the porch all summer long.

Here’s another version of Virginia creeper. I’ve seen it red, orange, yellow, purple and even white.

This was the scene along the Ashuelot river to the north of Keene. I’d guess that all the yellow was from black birch (Betula lenta.) Black birch almost always turns bright yellow quite early in the fall.

I had to show those trees on the ledges again because they’re so beautiful. Since they grow in almost no soil they’re stunted. I doubt any one of them is more than eight feet tall.

This is a view of Half Moon Pond in Hancock that I see on my way to work each morning. At this time of year it can be a very beautiful scene and I sometimes stop for a few moments of beauty and serenity to start the day.
I saw old Autumn in the misty morn
Stand, shadow-less like Silence, listening
To Silence
~ Thomas Hood
Thanks for coming by.
I know lots of people love Spring.So do I. But Autumn has always been my favourie season.
I like them both but I don’t like what comes after autumn. It can get mighty cold here in the winter.
Winter can have its good bits too, but then I am fortunate enough to able to keep myself warm these days. I still remember painfully cold feet at bus stops, freezing bathrooms and chilblains as a child though.
Me too!
Nothing beats fall in New England. Gorgeous photos.
Thanks!
I do miss autumns in New England, and the intense color changes Trees growing out of steep ledge is something I have seen from time to time, and I marvel at the tenacity of life. Beautiful photos, Allen!
Thank you Lavinia. Maybe someday you’ll be able to get back to see it again. It really is beautiful!
Thanks you for sharing. I’ve been enjoying your blog for a few years now. I’ve yet to see true a northern fall, in all its glory, in person so enjoy you photos and descriptions very much. In central Florida, our “fall” color change comes in February, when the elms turn yellow and the maples, Virginia creeper, and other plays turn red. Your photos have a different feel to them— new camera? Or new settings? Some today look like paintings!
Thank you Jennifer, I hope one day you’ll be able to get up here to see the foliage. People from all over the world usually come, so it can get a bit crowded.
The folks at WordPress have decided that we’d all be better off using its new “Block editor.” Unfortunately they didn’t make it any easier; it takes much longer to set up and publish a post, so I’m glad you like what you see.
I am glad that you have got your colour. You sounded a bit pessimistic about it recently.
That’s because nobody really knew what the drought would do to the colors. The drought has dulled them somewhat but they aren’t as bad as some of us thought they might be.
They look quite promising in your pictures.
I think we got lucky.
Gorgeous photos! Red maples are proving to color better than sugar maples, many of which sadly, have brown leaf fungus. Sumac and VA creeper, oh yes!
Thank you Eliza, I’m sorry to hear that. We have sugar maples where I work and they’re just turning yellow. I hope you have lots of red and silver maples to make up for it.
The reds seem to be really popping this year!
Wonderful autumn pictures! That’s how I like this season. Thanks!
You’re welcome. Hopefully you’ll see some more posts like this one before all the leaves fall.
Lots of stunning color, Allen! Hard to take a bad picture, huh? (Not that you take any bad pics, lol). My dogwoods are especially lovely right now, all burnished orange and rust. The other trees are just beginning to color-up around here. Your way to work sure has some pretty spots to distract you!
Thank you Ginny. Yes, you just point the camera anywhere to find color at this time of year.
I’m glad you have some there too. My son never said much about fall color when he was stationed in Delaware.
Yes, the road to work can be really beautiful and some days I have to remind myself that I’d better be moving along!
Beautiful pics! It does seem that Autumn just snuck up on us this year.
Thank you Mary. It was quick!
Colors of life ~ what an excellent series of photos. So many reason I love autumn, but the colors are number one.
Thanks very much, me too!
On our side of the state, many of the trees are already bare, a consequence of the drought. Yes, there’s some color, but more muted than usual. We noticed the same thing across Maine over the weekend.
Thank you Jnana. The drought has tamed some of the color here as well but it isn’t too bad. I have noticed that it is muted in some areas, as you say. I hope the drought ends soon!
Breath taking colours, what a switch to flip!
It seemed almost instantaneous this year!