DEAD LEAVES CLINGING
While driving through a foggy, soggy, bottomland woods of deciduous trees one rainy afternoon in early March of 2026, I noticed several trees had dead leaves still clinging to their twigs. I stopped to admire more closely the ginger-hued foliage on pin oak trees and white oak trees and pale-beige-colored leaves on American beech trees in that woodland. Those dead, dried leaves still attached to their twig moorings added another bit of color to the gray woods, as they had all winter. And I could see how many trees of each kind were living in that bottomland woods because of the dried foliage still clinging to them. As I admired the dead foliage on hose trees I remembered that pin oaks, white oaks and beeches have much in common. Obviously, they share wooded bottomland habitats with their moist soil. They all bear nuts that are consumed by squirrels, deer, bears, jays, wild turkeys and other kinds of woodland wil...