Fall foliage Oct. 4 with a barn’s patina on Flat Road in West Bethel. Rose Lincoln/Bethel Citizen

We’re now near the midway point of peak fall color season, and it’s looking the part in much of the northern two-thirds of the Lower 48 states. Some of the nation’s most iconic fall color spots are at or near peak.

According to the latest update from foliage tracking website Explore Fall, color varies from approaching peak to just past peak in interior New England, one of the country’s top leaf-peeping destinations, depending on elevation. With a steady supply of cool air pouring into the eastern United States over the next week, much of the region is likely to see relatively rapid color progression, including the Appalachians.

To the west, the lower Midwest and southern Great Lakes regions are draped in fiery fall colors while locations nearer the international border and the high terrain of the Mountain West move further past peak.

Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation & Forestry map

Most of northern New England, save the higher elevations, has peak color this weekend. The most vibrant color is increasingly shifting into central and southern New England and lower in elevation.

While much of interior New England is seeing peak color, the season has been lackluster by many accounts.

“Usually at this point, a wave of beautiful colors is sweeping south, downhill, and toward the coast of New England,” wrote Yankee Magazine in its weekly foliage update. “This is not at all what we are seeing this year.”

Advertisement

The Yankee Magazine update attributed the underwhelming color to a rainy late summer period that lead to leaf fungus, a lack of sustained cool air in fall and recent stormy and windy weather that resulted in leaf drop.

Closer to the coast, the big cities of the northeast along Interstate 95 are all seeing spotty color, with the most around Boston.

To the south, moderate to high color stretches along the Appalachian spine through Virginia into North Carolina.

A covered bridge is flanked by autumn leaves beginning to change color along the Contoocook River on Oct. 6 in Henniker, N.H. Charles Krupa/Associated Press

Into the central states, foliage is past its peak in northern Minnesota and much of Wisconsin, while colors are peaking just to the south. Areas west of Chicago and north of Lansing, Mich., are good places to seek fall color this weekend.

The high mountains of the West have been the places to be in recent weeks but are increasingly barren, some buried in snow. Lower elevation cities in the Pacific Northwest remain rather colorful.

Much of New England outside the mountains in the north will see near-peak or peak in the week to come. Toward the coast and lower elevations, moderate color is a good bet through Boston and Providence, R.I., while Hartford, Conn., is moving through high color. Locations east of the mountains from New Hampshire to Maine are also expected to approach peak over the next week.

Advertisement

Large parts of Pennsylvania, then southward along the Appalachians through the Virginias and into North Carolina, are moving into their best color. An exception is the highest elevations of West Virginia which are already past peak, but color remains abundant elsewhere in the state.

With foliage turning in the background, visitors examine the 1867 Lovejoy Bridge in Andover on Oct. 4. Rose Lincoln

Patches of foliage have begun to notably increase west of I-95 west of Washington and Philadelphia, which should see color explode over the next couple of weeks.

Spotty color is also likely to become more noticeable across much of the South from Oklahoma City and Dallas to the northern Gulf Coast region and the Carolinas.

While much of the Mountain West is beyond peak, Denver and Albuquerque are approaching it. Montana’s rolling plains are also in the midst of expanding color, as are inland valley locations like Boise, Idaho, and Salt Lake City. Portland, Medford and Eureka in Oregon, and Seattle are all to move closer to peak as well.

Copy the Story Link

Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.