Thursday, October 19, 2017

Changing season, changing colours



Autumn is rapidly advancing with the leaves of deciduous plants changing from green to a rainbow of red orange and yellow before they fall to the ground. Although, many leaves are hanging on with the sunny weather of the past week and their changing colours can be observed close-up.



This vine against the garden wall (left) shows the green pigments being withdrawn from the leaves revealing the underlying red and yellow pigments. The result is varying combinations of greens, yellows and reds, especially showing the veins. Not only leaves are changing colour, as they ripen berries turn bright red colours to attract birds. In the middle the glossy drupes of a Hawthorn. This cherry tree is almost ablaze as the leaves have all turned a bright orange-red.



The leaves that have fallen are starting to carpet the ground. These yellow leaves of the Common Ash obscure the park path. The grass underneath the trees in the park are sprinkled with fallen leaves. The leaves of ornamental cherries (middle) show a range of colours, ranging from yellow via peach to deep red. The fallen leaves of this red-leaved Norway Maple show how the leaves actually become softer in colour, changing from a deep plum purple to a wine red and eventually a deep bronze.



This Oak-leaved Hydrangea, a coarse woodland shrub from the U.S., turns wine red and purple in autumn. The leaves sometimes don’t drop of but dry on the stalks, only to be pushed aside by the fresh leaves emerging in spring. In the middle the leaves of Persian Ironwood (Parrotia) showing all shades between yellow and deep red, often in a single leaf. In contrast the leaves of the Spindle bush (right) all turn a uniform candy pink, which contrasts sharply with the last deep orange berries.

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