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is it almost here? Fall? is it coming? whooohoooo! (Maggot will hate me)
oh i LOVE Fall! it's so cool and pretty!

it's funny, up here in New England it always seemed like the Fall came in overnight Sept. 1. and summer left.

those years i lived in Fla. i missed Fall more than anything.

oh yes, come on Autumn! show your colors and chilly air and apples and crunchy leaves on the ground. i sure miss the smell of burning leaves. what do you love about Fall?


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ok so i'm rushing it.
I love Fall too! I love the decorations, the smells, the clothes, the holidays. All of it!
(08-20-2012, 01:00 PM)Lady Cop Wrote: [ -> ]what do you love about Fall?


Football! Football! Football! Cashmere sweaters & pretty hats, bonfires, pumpkin bread, open windows.
Ah yes, fall in San Diego. EXACTLY like summer, spring and winter.

Gear = numb.
Ahhh...Fall. Cold, damp, no/less bugs.

Leaf raking sucks though.
(08-20-2012, 01:40 PM)Duchess Wrote: [ -> ]
(08-20-2012, 01:00 PM)Lady Cop Wrote: [ -> ]what do you love about Fall?


Football! Football! Football! Cashmere sweaters & pretty hats, bonfires, pumpkin bread, open windows.

All of that except hats. I'm not much of a hat person. But I love boots!
(08-20-2012, 01:51 PM)Clang McFly Wrote: [ -> ]Ahhh...Fall. Cold, damp, no/less bugs.

Leaf raking sucks though.

Get a blower.




I meant for the leaves. Not for you.
(08-20-2012, 02:44 PM)ramseycat Wrote: [ -> ]
(08-20-2012, 01:51 PM)Clang McFly Wrote: [ -> ]Ahhh...Fall. Cold, damp, no/less bugs.

Leaf raking sucks though.

Get a blower.




I meant for the leaves. Not for you.
hah
I love the fall, the smell of the leaves, all the beautiful colors, yummy stews to warm you, the magic of Halloween, the smell of the night air as chimneys release smoke from cozy night time fires. So many things to love about the upcoming Season. (stealing my childrens halloween candy why they are not looking) Smiley_emoticons_smile
I used to like spring best but it's a little too cold for me now and fall is my favorite. I've always loved the cooling temperatures and changing leaves.We have oaks around here and they can be simply spectacular. The last couple falls have been weird with the '10 peak on Nov 1 and the '11 on Nov 2 but usually peak is mid-October here and no earlier than about the 7th or later than the 22nd.
Fall is my favorite season but I'm not ready for summer to end! Usually I'm excited for this time coming up, our weather has been fall like the last few days, but I just don't want summer to end. I've had a really good summer, maybe that's why. I'm usually working 50 hours a week and spend every day running around like a maniac. This summer has been pretty much beaches, picnics and doing whatever me and the kids feel like doing. I'm sad to see it end.
I have to jump on the fall band wagon as well. The cool crisp air is fantastic, and the colors that explode off the trees can be breathtaking in the right panorama. The sun even seems to get into the act by glowing a little golder too...

Love breaking out the crock pot for chili and stews... sitting warmly around the fire pit and enjoying a cigar with the cool air on your back... hot apple cider with a shot of vodka... gazing up at the stars that are a little easier to see in the clearer air of fall and winter.

Yeah, bring on the fall!
Fall, is nice and all that, but it also means it's that much closer to the SNOW & ICE season in NE!

Don't really care for the SNOW & ICE anymore. Cold is OK, SNOW & ICE, not so much.
(Spoken like a true SNOWBIRD hah)
try these if you can find them near you...YUMMY!

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Visit an apple orchard this fall and you're just as likely to see folks munching on golden-brown apple-cider doughnuts as you are actual apples. Beyond the standard cake doughnut, cider doughnuts have apple cider added right into the batter, lending a touch of sweetness and a subtle cider tang that most people find dangerously addictive. When we enjoy doughnuts in the fall, we continue a tradition that began in our farming days, when cooler temperatures meant the arrival of the butchering season, with its surplus of rendered fat--perfect for frying doughnuts. The abundance of apple orchards in New England made cider a logical and flavorful addition, whether intentional or accidental, to the doughnut batter. Hot from the fryer, cider doughnuts are sometimes glazed or showered in cinnamon sugar, but most often they're gobbled up plain, purchased as singles or in paper bags of a half-dozen.
yankee mag


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YUM! I haven't had an apple cider donut in years. Should take advantage of living at home and get some this Fall...only 20-30 minutes away in Vermont.
Hot Damn, those donuts look good! Ashamed to say, never had one.
The local Stewarts was advertising Apple Cider donuts, but they are nowhere as good as the hot fresh ones from the Apple Barn in Vermont.

BEWARE THE FALSE APPLE CIDER GODS!
it must be Fall now, first chilly morning and i am making some oatmeal. the cooked kind, no instant slop. with butter and milk. eat your oatmeal kiddies! it's yummy! hah

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CNN-- A new crispness in the air. The red, orange and yellow of the leaves changing colors. The crunch of the first few leaves on the ground.

On that inevitable march toward winter, there are still a few weeks for the casual and determined leaf peeper alike to enjoy the leaves changing color before they fall.

Never mind that it happens every year. "It's because it's fleeting is why it's new every year," says Mel Allen, editor of Yankee Magazine. In each of his 33 years at the magazine leaf peeping has been a fall cover story.



"It's fall and the leaves are becoming beautiful; apple orchards; and the hawks are flying overhead. It's a sensual experience," he says.

"If you were to talk to someone in New Orleans who had had 33 Mardi Gras, they'd still be excited about it," says Allen. "This is our party."
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Different shades of red, orange and yellow

While evergreen trees such as pines and spruces have foliage that has evolved to survive extreme temperature changes, deciduous (broad-leaved) trees have evolved to drop their leaves and go dormant for the winter, says Ed Sharron, a science communication specialist with the National Park Service's Northeast Temperate Network in Vermont.

"It's such stark contrast," says Sharron, who's based at Marsh Billings Rockefeller National Historical Park in Woodstock, Vermont. "There are different shades of green, of course, when you start to get that variation of oranges and reds and purples and greens all together. It's pretty spectacular."
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Ed Sharron: Why leaves change color

Trees that "have been stressed throughout the year by extensive drought or many other factors, they may decide to pack it in early and go dormant for the winter sooner than during a typical year," Sharron says. "This could cause their leaves to fall off sooner or be browner than normal. Every year is different and you never can tell how good the foliage season is going to be until it's here."

The Northeast's most popular sites

Who cares if it's cliché to say that first-time leaf peepers should drive New Hampshire's Kancamagus Highway; visit Woodstock or Smuggler's Notch in Vermont, or head north to Acadia National Park in Maine?

"There's a reason why they're so popular, and these are places I try to go to every year," says Jim Salge, a New Hampshire-based trained meteorologist and high school physics teacher who blogs about the fall foliage season for Yankee Magazine.

If Salge has an extra day this year, he'll head to Dixville Notch in far northern New Hampshire, where the leaves are likely to peak by late September. "The mountains are really jagged and have a feel unlike anywhere else in the Northeast."



Between North and South

Northern and Southern trees meet peacefully at the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area, a National Park Service area that includes the states of New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

"In the Delaware Gap I think we have some of the best fall foliage," says Kathleen Sandt, a park ranger in the national recreation area. "We are on the border of northern species that usually don't come down south and the border for some of the trees that grow in the southern region."

The gap is also home to trees living at different elevations. There are sycamores, elms, maples, poplars on a fertile flood plain along the river. At higher elevations, there are various types of oaks and maples to see as hikers head up toward the mountains.

Tree spotters may be pleased to spot the American larch, a deciduous conifer that isn't found much farther south. It's a rare combination of a deciduous tree, which means it loses its leaves each fall; and a conifer, which has needles and cones. In the fall the larch's needles turn bright yellow and fall, like leaves.

"It grows in wetter areas in the park, and it's spectacular in the fall," Sandt says.

Head north to Maine country

Fall is Wanda Moran's favorite season. The Acadia National Park ranger loves the cold and clear weather that is already coming to the Maine island.

"It smells like fall, the leaves start turning and it gets really pretty," says Moran, a Mainer by birth. "It's a beautiful time to be here, and it's a nice hiking and biking time."

Prime leaf peeping season varies a lot throughout the state, she says. Trees are likely to change colors in Northern Maine during the last week in September, while central and Western Maine leaves will likely peak the first week in October. The coast usually peaks the week of Columbus Day and the week after, and Acadia will peak the second or third week in October.

Moran's favorite spot at Acadia: "Beech Mountain is a nice place to climb if you want to get up high. It's a pretty easy climb and you get beautiful views all together, looking way out into the ocean."

She also likes Baxter State Park and seeing the leaves on the drive from Ellsworth to Bangor on Route 1A.

Leaf peeping out West

Although New England tends to dominate articles about leaf peeping, it's rumored that trees in colder parts of the rest of the United States also have leaves that change colors.

As Colorado heads toward ski season, its national parks are starting to burst into fall colors. Rocky Mountain National Park is known for Trail Ridge Road, where aspen trees at lower elevations transform to gold among the evergreens. (Trail Ridge Road is also included in Peak to Peak, a state-designated scenic byway.)

Colorado's White River National Forest, home to the heavily photographed Maroon Bells and 10 ski areas, is also packed with beautiful leaf peeping areas. It's also the current home of this year's Capitol Christmas Tree. Check the impressive evergreens out while they're still firmly rooted.

Not surprisingly, New Mexico's five national forests also pack a lot of fall foliage at varying elevations. Carson National Forest is home to Wheeler Peak, which at 13,161 feet is the highest spot in New Mexico. Santa Fe National Forest's 1.6 million acres includes 13,103-foot-high Truchas Peak, within the Pecos Wilderness.

Don't stress about "peak foliage"

Many veteran peepers go searching for the perfect "peak foliage" moment in Vermont (or Maine or Massachusetts) when the leaves are the perfect combination of red, brown, orange and yellow, where the red farm house in the distance is perfectly in contrast and the apple cider tastes just crisp enough.

"It's a mythical term," Yankee Magazine's Allen says. "There is no such thing." Fifteen miles down the road, the leaves may have already fallen and another 15 miles down the road, the leaves may not be ready to fall. "Think it of it as a continuum and make it a journey."
soon!

Vermont
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my yard
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duckies in the cranberry bog~

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New Hampster~
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