Features

"A
Time to Fall"
A Photo Essay by Fred
First
Fred First © 2005
It amazes me how a
leaf knows when its time has come to fall. Perhaps some
combination of day length and temperature gives the signal.
But maybe it's just the good taste to abort, an inner
sensitivity to the needs of the whole, giving its parent
tree a chance to hibernate with its blood gone underground
for the winter, safe from freezing. Whatever reason and
whatever the trigger for the moment of leaf launch, I'm
glad they don't all get the same idea on the same day.

First, the walnut and basswood
and spicebush leaves fly in the first winds of tropical
storms or sudden thunderstorms in late summer. The poplars
and hickories, cherries and sumacs have the good manners
to wait a while, until after a leaf has had the proper
opportunity to strut its chameleon color changes during
October before finally falling, drab and shriveled, in
a north wind on a bleak November day.
An oak leaf will refuse to
let go until December, clacking and waggling brown and
brittle in the cold breezes. The serrated leaves of a
smooth-boled American Beech turn almost white and become
so thin and light, they seem to move on their own on a
still January day. This year's beech leaf may persist
on the twig until next spring's new baby leaf evicts it,
finally, pushing it out and away, off into space, down
to the black soil among the first of the spring mustards
and violets.
Leaves enter my fantasies,
I confess. I have wondered about them, individually, and
as a race. If all of the leaves from the countless trees
on our acres here fell and did not decompose by the following
spring...if this happened year after year, how many years
would it take to choke off all growth along the forest
floor? Should our woods remain alive after even one year
of such a calamity, which is doubtful, how many years
of leaf-fall would it take to completely fill the bowl
of our valley to the rim?
If all these same leaves
could by some fairy-industry be stitched together, edge
to edge, would it make one huge leaf as big as all of
Floyd county?
And I wonder: If a fella
were to lie on his back in these woods for a day, could
he learn to tell all the leaves to species merely by the
pattern of their falling from the tree on a still day?
My hypothesis is 'yes', and I will likely undertake this
study soon, purely for the sake of science, you understand.
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Fred First grows words and images
on a rocky old farm in northeastern Floyd County. His
daily ramblings can be found on his weblog, Fragments
from Floyd. E-mail and comments welcomed.