Fall Leaves Turning Early Thanks to Chilly Temperatures (Photos)
Josh Popichak
Est. Read Time: 4mins
A maple tree along Skibo Road in Lower Saucon Township is tinged with orange, less than a week after the start of fall.
Before the summer of 2020 had officially ended, fall temperatures had already arrived, but they were merely a taste of things to come according to area weather forecasters.
One benefit of the colder-than-average temperatures has been an early start to the state’s colorful annual fall foliage spectacle. Trees throughout east central and northeast Pennsylvania are already displaying autumnal splotches of red, orange and yellow leaves, about a week ahead of schedule, PWA lead forecaster Josh Adams reported Saturday.
Burning bush behind the Burger King on Rt. 309 in Coopersburg lived up to its name Saturday.
Areas across the state’s northern tier counties are already approaching peak color, while in the Lehigh Valley Adams said we can expect to see peak colors in two to three weeks.
For those yearning for a return to summer, temperatures over the next few days will be above normal, with highs in the upper 70s to low 80s. The warmth will not last long, however, as by Friday highs will only reach the mid 60s, according to the latest National Weather Service forecast for Hellertown.
Some of the trees along N. Main Street just outside Coopersburg borough were various shades of yellow Saturday, thanks to cooler-than-normal temperatures that have hastened the changing of this year’s leaves.
Hints of fall color were visible in Spring Valley Saturday.
The crowns of maple trees that line Skibo Road just outside Hellertown were tinged crimson Saturday.
The leaves on a tree near the Saucon Rail Trail crossing at Station Avenue in Coopersburg were rapidly changing from green to yellow Saturday.
Trees along Sioux Street in Fountain Hill, Lehigh County, showed fairly advanced fall coloration Saturday.
In Lower Saucon Township, Spring Valley Road was a pretty sight to behold thanks to the early fall foliage that is decorating it.
In addition to the benefits of exercise, the Saucon Rail Trail also offers local residents some outstanding vantage points for “leaf-peeping” each fall. The pictured section of trail is adjacent to the Reading Drive trailhead in Lower Saucon Township.
Sunlight dapples the yellowing leaves of a tree near Ye Olde Spring Valley Tavern in Spring Valley, Upper Saucon Township, Lehigh County.
On the wings of a mild breeze, colorful leaves fluttered to the ground Saturday. In so doing, they helped mark one of the earliest starts to fall foliage season in years.