(21 Sep 2024)
RESTRICTION SUMMARY:
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Waltham, Massachusetts – 18 September 2024
1. Wide of Andy Finton, senior conservation ecologist at the Massachusetts chapter of the nonprofit group The Nature Conservancy, looking at early fall foliage colors
2. SOUNDBITE (English) Andy Finton, Senior Conservation Ecologist, The Nature Conservancy: ++PARTIALLY COVERED++
"This year’s fall foliage season, and I’ll start here in New England where we’re standing, is going to be a good year, but not the ideal year. Not the perfect year. And the reason being is that we had a good summer. We had some rain and some moderate temperatures. Unfortunately, the last month we’ve had very little precipitation in New England. And it’s been warmer than usual. The result of the warm and dry weather is that some leaves are going to dry up early. They’re going to turn yellow, maybe even turn brown and fall off prematurely. It’s their survival mechanism. The other thing is that some trees are going to turn later. And the third thing is that some trees that normally turn brilliant red aren’t going to have enough sugar in the leaf because of the warmer temperatures. The colder temperatures trap sugar in the leaf that turns brilliant red and gives you the most beautiful colors, especially in the maples."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ARCHIVE: Keene Valley, New York – 27 September 2020
3. Two visitors photograph the colorful autumn view at the Indian Head vista overlooking Lower Ausable Lake in the Adirondacks
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Waltham, Massachusetts – 18 September 2024
4. Leaves showing early fall colors
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Portsmouth, New Hampshire – 18 September 2024
5. Close up of leaves turning colors on the banks of a river
6. Low angle shot of landscape cleaning crew blowing fallen leaves
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Waltham, Massachusetts – 18 September 2024
7. Leaves showing early fall colors
8. Low angle shot of colorful fallen leaves in the foreground, with a woman walking a dog in the background
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Andy Finton, Senior Conservation Ecologist, The Nature Conservancy: ++COVERED++
"We go through the year without really paying attention to our forests, and then they turn these brilliant colors of red, orange, yellow, gold, bronze, rust in the fall. And it reminds us that there’s some amazing amount of diversity out there."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Waltham, Massachusetts – 18 September 2024
10. Close up of a shrub with red and green colors
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Groton, Massachusetts – 19 September 2024
11. Trees with leaves turning yellow and orange flanking a flap pole with the U.S. flag
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Concord, New Hampshire – 19 September 2024
12. Leaves turning colors in early fall
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ARCHIVE: Denmark, Maine – 13 October 2021
13. Still, of valley fog wafting through the autumn-colored hills near the Picket Hill Farm, a complex built in the 1830s
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Waltham, Massachusetts – 18 September 2024
14. SOUNDBITE (English) Andy Finton, Senior Conservation Ecologist, The Nature Conservancy: ++COVERED++
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ARCHIVE: Augusta, Maine – 23 October 2017
15. Still of the Maine State House surrounded by fall foliage
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ARCHIVE: Cumberland, Maine – 10 October 2016
16. Still taken with a slow shutter speed, showing autumn’s colors peak on hardwood trees in a cemetery near the Congregational Church
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ARCHIVE: Damariscotta, Maine – 6 October 2015
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ARCHIVE: Freeport, Maine – 16 September 2011
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Waltham, Massachusetts – 18 September 2024
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