Autumn colour

I’m an early riser, and the October mornings are getting dark. Each day, I get up, make myself a cup of tea, sit down with my knitting, and watch the sun come up.

I sit by a west-facing window in the chaff house. The sun rises behind the mill, and illuminates this tree.

On a sunny October morning, it appears to be lit from within.

Each day it seems to me more beautiful…

…with its canopy of leaves in so many glorious autumnal shades.

Yesterday, I asked Tom to photograph the leaves, whose colourful variety is truly stunning

We were even able to produce a chromatic gradient!

And a colour wheel!

With the help of a great 1977 volume entitled Trees of the World, which was kindly left to me by the mill’s former owners, I was able to ascertain that this tree is not a maple, as I’d first assumed, but a variety of sweet gum, since its leaves, when crushed, smell resinous. (I’ve been reliant on the RHS app for identifying many plants in the mill garden, but it does have its limitations).

You can see the tree on the left, there, peeping over the old wall. At the far right you can see the edge of the chaff house, where I sit each morning. In front of that are my summer pots, with the last of the dahlias, and some gone-over sweet peas and pelargoniums, which I’ll be clearing out and replanting with bulbs over the next few days (having gone a wee bit bulb crazy). And there, on the back doorstep are some just-planted auriculas and muscari, which will be moved beside the window to provide a little winter colour, when the sweet gum leaves are gone.

I have been here since February now, watching the colours change throughout the seasons. Every day I feel more full of gratitude for this garden, and all the work that has gone into it. On these October mornings I am especially grateful for this sweet gum tree, and the corona of red and gold with which it lights up each day.

What’s bringing Autumn colour where you are?


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