Thinning Tule Fog, Morning. © Copyright 2012 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.
Autumn trees begin to emerge from thinning morning tule fog, Central Valley.
As I post this photograph and text it is mid-September, although the post is being queued up for the first day of October. Most of you will see it on October 1. (If you see it earlier, use your imagination!) The onset of autumn in my part of California always seems to take longer than I expect, even after decades of experiencing it. For many years I subconsciously felt that it began when school started again “in the fall,” even though the start dates usually occurred while it was still late summer. This association with fall led me to expect to see fall weather in September, but September in most of California feels much more like summer. I still struggle with this seasonal displacement.
But if you are seeing this on October 1, it now actually is fall, and even though we typically have some warm days ahead of us — and usually the real rains are at least a month away — the change is now becoming more obvious. The nights last longer than the days, mornings are cool, the clouds from incoming Pacific systems start to pass overhead, and the aspens are turning in the Sierra Nevada. This is my favorite season — the time of soft light and clouds and autumn colors. This photograph comes from a late-autumn day in California’s Central Valley, as morning tule fog began to thin. (Note: This is a reworking of an image posted previously.)
G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” is available from Heyday Books and Amazon.
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