From a Weekend Retreat to a House in the Country A thirty-year long learning curve.
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October 30th, 2015

10/30/2015

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                   The Autumn Colors

This is the time of the year that our trees put on a show. It starts in October and lasts until the leaves fall. The normally green leaves of many deciduous trees and shrubs, now begin to  take on the autumn shades of red, yellow, purple, orange and brown. We are very blessed in our area to get a beautiful palette that paints our hills in golden hues. Children are often told that the crisp nights and frosty winds cause the leaves to change colors.

Have you ever thought about how it happens? The leaves are green because of the presence of a pigment known as chlorophyll. It is the engine that feeds the plants as they grow in the spring and summer. The chlorophyll’s green color dominates and masks out the colors of any other pigments that may be present in the leaf. 
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he chlorophyll has the vital function of capturing solar rays, utilizing the resulting energy in the manufacture of the plant’s food, turning carbon dioxide from the air and water from the ground, into simple sugars. During the growing season, the plant replenishes the chlorophyll so that the leaves stay green.

In late summer, as daylight hours shorten and the temperatures cool, the veins that carry fluids into and out of the leaf are gradually closed off by a new layer of special cork cells. During this time, the chlorophyll begins to decrease and the hidden pigments of yellow and orange are revealed, and red pigments are synthesized once half of the chlorophyll has been degraded. 
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There are many theories why trees show their brilliant colors in the fall. The one I like best is the one that the tree protects the leaf against the harmful effects of light at low temperatures. By shielding the leaf, the tree manages to reabsorb nutrients, such as nitrogen, more efficiently.

It is also true, that trees communicate with their surroundings, and a tree’s colors may also be signals to beneficial and parasitic insects, displaying the trees health and vigor. Just as the biology of a large stand of trees of the same species, can show a ripple of biological changes move across the grove of trees, as stress chemicals are released from trees under attack, it might be true that the fall colors may be sending signals to their surroundings.

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Compared to Western Europe, North America provides more arbor species (more than 800 species and about 70 species of oaks, compared to 51 and 3 in Western Europe) which adds many more different colors to the spectacle.

This richness and diversity of species, creates a yearly masterpiece of natural art  that blankets the region, luring droves of city bound neighbors to drive our hills and- for at least a day's outing, enjoy the natural bounty. It is a glorious time!

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    >This is about our journey from being Big City people to learning how to embrace a country lifestyle. 

    We bought an old farmhouse (built in the 1850's); we have hay fields and woods, streams, bridges and a long drive way. Our neighbors are far away. We are so far away that we have to go to the post office to get our mail. For us it has been paradise.

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