By Sharon Omahen
University of Georgia
If leaf-watching is a traditional part of your fall outings, it’s
time to plan your trip to the Georgia mountains. University of
Georgia professor Kim Coder says Oct. 18 through Nov. 8 are the
best times to see nature’s color display.
A UGA Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources tree
health care specialist, Coder uses his personal leaf color model
that is based on climate and tree health factors to estimate the
peak times for viewing yellow, orange and red leaf color waves.
Orange peak = Nov. 1
“This year’s peak for orange coloring is predicted at Nov. 1, so
good viewing should be two weeks ahead of this date and one week
past it,” he said.
He suggests mapping out two routes for your leaf-watching
trek.
“Take one northbound Georgia highway up and come back on
another,” he said. “Once you reach your destination, get up high
to see the best color distribution.”
Nature’s fall color display is the result of trees’ natural
living processes.
“Dead leaves just turn brown and fall, but living leaf tissue
develops color with bright days, cool but not freezing
temperatures and a slight drought,” Coder said. “Hard freezes or
frost at night, overcast and wet conditions can damage color
formation, and a big, windy storm front can blow all the leaves
off the trees.”
A natural process
Trees naturally turn color this time of year as they enter what
Coder calls “a resting phase of their lives.”
“The chlorophyll breaks apart, and the supporting leaf tissues
are sealed off from the tree and allowed to die,” he said. “This
process allows new pigments to be made and old pigments to be
revealed.”
Red, yellow and brown are the colors most people equate with fall
leaf color. But Coder says many more colors are on nature’s
palette.
“The three color systems tree leaves use are bright yellow to
bright crimson oil colors, blue to deep purple water colors, and
tan to dark brown earth tones,” Coder said. “Some trees, like
sweetgum, can have all three colors on one tree. Other trees,
like some oaks, have reds and dark reds all over the crown.”
Display flows south
If you don’t have the time or money to travel north, you can
still enjoy fall leaf color displays.
“Because of cool, bright and clear conditions, the colors start
at higher altitudes and flow downhill into the valleys headed
south,” Coder said. “There are three color waves that pass through
seven to 16 days apart, depending upon the year. A yellow wave
first, then an orange wave and finally a red wave that leads into
winter.”
So, if you can’t get to the mountains for the first wave, stay
where you are and the color will come to you.