We have had very warm autumns with drought the past few years. This year has had adequate rainfall, and we’ve had a string of warm sunny days combined with night temps below 40 degrees, so the leaves are turning bright colors instead of just drying up and falling.
We haven’t even gotten a first frost yet in the Cities. I still have blooming dahlias.
Hemidactylussays
We don’t get as pronounced a Fall in Florida. In Spring the oaks shit yellow all over my vehicle and spooge sap too. Or maybe that was revenge for cutting one oak’s sprawling limbs back a bit.
nomdeplumesays
Looks like the Trump ballroom carpet…
John Moralessays
Not golden brown, texture like sun, then. Aww.
birgerjohanssonsays
John Morales @ 4
If you know, you know.
prairieslugsays
Looks like Acer platanoides. They develop color later than the native maples, and their leaves often freeze and die before they change color here in Minnesota. At least until recent years, with our warmer longer fall season I see them change color quite often.
We have had very warm autumns with drought the past few years. This year has had adequate rainfall, and we’ve had a string of warm sunny days combined with night temps below 40 degrees, so the leaves are turning bright colors instead of just drying up and falling.
We haven’t even gotten a first frost yet in the Cities. I still have blooming dahlias.
We don’t get as pronounced a Fall in Florida. In Spring the oaks shit yellow all over my vehicle and spooge sap too. Or maybe that was revenge for cutting one oak’s sprawling limbs back a bit.
Looks like the Trump ballroom carpet…
Not golden brown, texture like sun, then. Aww.
John Morales @ 4
If you know, you know.
Looks like Acer platanoides. They develop color later than the native maples, and their leaves often freeze and die before they change color here in Minnesota. At least until recent years, with our warmer longer fall season I see them change color quite often.