You would think that as many trees as there were to choose from
finding the Perfect Tree would have been easy.... NOT!Click the sign to read... As I traveled in my search I found many things to shoot... Like
this bridge in Bedford County
Mr. Carolina Wren, is checking out my new house
I got for my birthday. He likes the deer horn for a perch...
no help from him
Looking down into the valley you would think one Perfect
Tree would just jump out... Where are those bright vibrant
colors from years past....
Well now that you ask.....
Perhaps you've noticed that in some years, the red fall colors seem brighter and more spectacular than in other years. The temperature and cloud cover can make a big difference in a tree's red colors from year to year.
When a number of warm, sunny autumn days and cool but not freezing nights come one after the other, it's going to be a good year for reds. In the daytime, the leaves can produce lots of sugar, but the cool night temperatures prevent the sugar sap from flowing through the leaf veins and down into the branches and trunk. Anthocyanins to the rescue! This helps make sure that the tree will be ready for the next growing season. Anthocyanins give leaves the bright, brilliant shades of red, purple and crimson.
Are you asking what is an anthocyanins?
They are not present until the leaf begins breaking
down the chlorophyll, and have been shown to act as a "sunscreen",
protecting cells from high-light damage by absorbing blue-green
and UV light, thereby protecting the tissues
They are not present until the leaf begins breaking
down the chlorophyll, and have been shown to act as a "sunscreen",
protecting cells from high-light damage by absorbing blue-green
and UV light, thereby protecting the tissues
But it had already released all of it's yellow and orange
colors and they've become a blanket for the grass
Aha! If only the sky was blue...when I came across this
tree in a golf course in Bedford County... Almost perfect?
The amount of rain in a year also affects autumn leaf color.
A warm, wet period during fall will lower the intensity,
or brightness, of autumn colors.
7 comments:
I always shake my head in frustration when I see daytime skunk shots! I can never be so lucky! Congrats!
Hope you were using a looong zoom for that skunk shot!!
I enjoyed looking for the perfect fall tree with you- even if we didn't find it. The looking for it was perfect.
Hannibal: Thanks! actually it was dusk and I used the flash..
Lynne: The skunk was right beside my deck and was quite uninterested in me... haha
Jalynn - great info on trees! And great animal shots, as always!
-Lynn
One brave lady to try and snag a pic of a skunk!! I probably wouldn't have been that brave..ha ha! Love your pictorial search but I love your philosophical solution just as well..some times we have to count what blessing we have and just sit back and enjoy..good message J!
I think I saw several perfect trees in this post.This proved to be a very interesting post,just drawing me on to read more.Thanks.
Blessings,Ruth
What a brave lady taking that photo of the skunk! Using a flash that might startle him is even braver. I think you found plenty of perfect trees in this post and I am in awe the beauty around you even with the gray skies and mist.
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