Last chance to see fall’s colors at their finest

Now comes leaf-fall, and the color rustles in the wind, skitters at the roadside, drifts in sheltered corners.... The leaves come down and the glory of the autumn woodland is briefly a restless golden drift, a wine-red flurry in the wind.... The countryside is festive in motley for a little while, rustling, and raggedly beautiful.

— Hal Borland

This week

The Cricketsong Moon wanes throughout the period, entering its final phase at 7:46 a.m. on Oct. 30. It moves from Gemini into fertile Cancer on the 27th, then into Leo on the 30th.

This waning moon favors the quarterly dipping of livestock for external parasites, and is best for worming, trimming of hooves, castration and butchering. Also dig up your onions; cut off the mum tops; feed your hungry trees and bushes (after they’ve dropped their leaves); cut flowers and herbs for drying. Complete the silage harvest, and bring in the corn and soybeans.

Now is also the time to start forcing paperwhites and amaryllis bulbs for the holiday season, especially on Oct. 27, 28, and 29 under Cancer. Gardeners should also put in spring bulbs and dormant roses, and mulch perennials before November rains begin. Soil should be tested, and the lawn mowed (hopefully) for the last time. And don’t forget that dahlias, gladiolus, and cama need to be dug and stored with care before November’s deeper freezes.

Lunar lore also suggests that animals may become pregnant more easily during the moon’s third quarter than during other weeks of the month. As for fishing and hunting, the moon will be overhead

The moon wanes through its third quarter this week, and it will be most powerful above you between midnight and dawn. For your convenience, select the second-best hunting and fishing times — the afternoons — especially as the Oct. 30 and Nov. 2 cold fronts approach.

The weather

Record highs for November are almost always set during the first days of the month; the chances for an afternoon in the 70s actually increase by 30 percent over those of last week. Clouds usually thin out; autumn rains hold off. However, the first weather system of the month arrives between the 1st and the 4th of the month, and it can bring the first killing frost of the year. After this front, highs typically drop sharply from the 60s into the 50s or 40s, and the rest of the sugar maple leaves fall — an easy landmark for the beginning of Late Fall. Looking ahead: November’s temperatures fall one degree every 50 hours in Clark County, finding the mid-30s by the end of the month. Typical highs slip down to the 40s and average lows dip below 29 by Dec. 1. With averages plummeting a total of 14 degrees, expect around 15 mornings below freezing in November

Daybook

Oct. 25:

Watch for foot rot to increase in your herd or flock with wet autumn pastures, especially in the northern states. Clean infected hooves, and feed your animals kale from the garden, molasses, oats and pulped carrots in order to improve healing.

Oct. 26: Pastures may be regreening in some areas now, part of the second-spring process that brings a resurgence in wildflower development in the woods. Provide plenty of free choice hay to livestock in order to reduce the chance they will gorge themselves on fresh growth.

Oct. 27: Wrap new trees with burlap to help them ward off winter winds. Complete fall field and garden tillage before November chill and rains.

Oct. 28: When thimbleweed heads are tufted like cotton, then that's the time to plan marketing your goat and sheep cheese, Christmas cacti, dried flowers and grasses, poinsettias, mistletoe and ginseng for the holidays.

Oct. 29: The Muslim festival of Eid Al-Adha is only 19 days away. Could you be marketing your lambs and kids in the range of 55 to 80 pounds for this market?

Oct. 30: The moon enters its final quarter today. Since this is a weak lunar day, the cool front that crosses the nation near Oct. 30 should be milder than average.

Oct. 31: Feed the trees after all their leaves are down. If you put the leaves in bags and leave alone, they will turn to compost and be ready for the garden in March of 2012 or 2013.

Countdown to Late Fall

Throughout the Miami Valley, this is the last week of the best autumn color. The second tier of leaves, consisting mostly of early box elders and maples, has come down (the first tier was the ashes and locusts and buckeyes), and the third and final phase of Middle Fall begins today, with the oaks and the osage, white mulberries and ginkgoes, the late black and sugar maples changing into full color.

As foliage comes down, eastern phoebes, yellow-bellied sapsuckers, catbirds and house wrens depart. The last turkey vultures follow the robins south. Cattails begin to break apart this week, and beggarticks, long finished blooming, are ready to stick to your pants. The final asters of the year go to seed. Morning fog becomes more common.

Harvest continues, with half of the corn and three-fourths of the soybeans cut in a typical year. Apple orchards have been picked clean of fruit. More than 80 percent of the winter wheat has ordinarily been planted, 65 percent has typically emerged.

Mind and body clock

Now the leaf fall begins in earnest, and all the illusions of autumn begin to fade. At the same time, the charm of the new landscape is unmistakable. The branches of the trees are dark and clean against the dove-colored skies of late October and early November. There is something both stark and invigorating in the bare tree line. If you look closely, you will see the growth of a second spring thriving in the woods, foliage of plants that will be among the first to bloom next April and May. And the last leaves of Late Fall, the forsythia and the honeysuckle, often glow like the leaves of April, promising hope for the year to come.

Bill Felker has been watching local weather and writing almanacks since 1984. Contact him at wfelker@woh.rr.com or visit his Web site at poorwillsalmanack.com.