AUTUMN YIELDING TO WINTER
Late October into November in southeastern Pennsylvania has a special, wild feeling rather than the warm, easy feeling of summer and early fall. The sun is now low in the southern sky all day and daylight each succeeding day continues to get shorter. The sun now appears to be setting as early as 3:30 P.M. The average temperature per day is lower and the air is crisp and fresh, unlike the uncomfortable humidity of summer and early fall. All this is a dramatic change that indicates that winter is approaching. From late October, into November, green evergreen trees slowly become more visible as curtains of innumerable, warm-colored deciduous leaves fall to the ground, reminding me of a snowfall. It's fun to kick through multi-colored, leafy carpets of dead, fallen foliage on the ground. Most conifers are planted in southeastern Pennsylvania, mostly on lawns, in parks and elsewhere. But in the bleak of late autumn and winter, they remind me of wild conifers in