 |
Leaves turn color.
Aspen colors usually
reach their peak by the fourth week in the high country. In the foothills, shrubs,
leafy plants, and grasses
start to change color.
The last of the wild fruits ripen. Local apples reach their peak and Gambel Oak
Acorns ripen.
http://www.durangonaturestudies.org/articles/101004.htm
for more on Fall Leaves
and http://www.durangonaturestudies.org/articles/091204.htm for more on Gambel
Oaks.
We typically receive
our first mild frost
(down to 28 degrees) sometime in the first two weeks of September, and then experience
an extended Indian
Summer where days are
warm and nights are cool.
If you keep warm season vegetables covered at night,
you can usually milk them
along until October.
Now is the time to dry flour corn on the stalk and let winter squash and pumpkin
skins harden up for winter
storage. But be careful.
A hard frost will turn your hard earned yields to mush.
Look for Winter Squash,
Garlic, Pumpkin and
the last of the summer warm season vegetables at local farmers markets.
|