An empty logging truck zooms past a large display of autumn foliage on Route 26 in Woodstock on Friday afternoon. (Andree Kehn/Sun Journal)

Leaves are turning red throughout the region, including this delicate leaf in Paris. (Andree Kehn/Sun Journal)

Maple trees are among some of the most colorful autumn trees in Maine. (Andree Kehn/Sun Journal)

AUGUSTA — From Kittery to Fort Kent, trees are ablaze with color.

“We’re looking good in central Maine,” said Gale Ross, the fall foliage spokeswoman for the Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry. “We’re going toward peak this weekend and Columbus Day in northern Maine, right on time.”

Central and southern Maine are showing moderate foliage, with color on 30 to 50 percent of trees with little leaf drop. That means central and southern Maine will have two or more weeks of color.

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This year the colors are typical, “which isn’t shabby,” Ross said. In the past few days “there’s been a dramatic change” in central Maine. “It didn’t happen overnight, but in the last three nights.”

Last month Ross forecast a slow start to the season because of a hot summer and drought conditions, which makes for stressed trees. Stressed trees defoliate early.

But in recent weeks the weather has turned for the better for good leaf colors. There’s been an abundance of rain. Temperatures have dipped with cool but not freezing nights.

“We have reversed ourselves with the rain, and obvious shortened days and cooler temperatures” as trees get ready for winter. 

“The progression is going perfectly,” Ross said. “Now we’re right on time. It’s looking very good.”

The forecast in the coming week is for moderate temperatures during the day, cool nights, “but not super cold. I think the foliage will hang in there for a bit,” Ross said.

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Statewide, fall tourism is up, said Jennifer Geiger of the Maine Office of Tourism. Since 2013, Maine has seen consistent growth every fall. 

Numbers aren’t yet available for 2018 because the year is not complete. In 2017, total tourism visits were estimated at 36.7 million, of that nearly a third, 10.6 million, were between September and November.

The number of autumn tourists in 2017 was 3.5 percent higher than the year before; in 2016, fall visitors were estimated at 10.3 million, a 5.3 percent annual increase; in 2015 fall visitors were estimated at 9.7 million, a 12.8 percent increase, and in 2013, fall visitors were estimated at 8.1 million.

This long weekend, which includes Columbus Day on Monday, is typically when leaf-peeper tourist traffic is the heaviest, Ross said. After that, traffic will get back to normal. “Then it’s time for the natives to get out.”

In Bethel on Thursday, the trees were nearing peak, said Jessie Perkins, executive director of the Bethel Chamber of Commerce. “The color is getting really good.”

Tourists were streaming about, taking photos. Fall foliage typically peaks for western Maine around Columbus Day, which is good timing for the area, Perkins said.

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Tourism is always steady in October, and this year is no exception, she said. “Everybody’s as busy as they can be. This weekend will be very busy, Perkins said. At Sunday River on Saturday (Oct. 6) the North American Wife Carrying Contest attracts many people. Bethel’s fall festival is on Oct. 12.

Maine has issued a fall foliage report since 1959. Ross has acted as foliage spokeswoman for 15 years.

To prepare weekly reports, “we have spotters, Maine rangers who gather observations. They also send me photos so I can have a firsthand look,” she said. “It’s a department-wide effort.”

Foliage reports are given on the official foliage website www.mainefoliage.com, the department’s Facebook page and Instagram (@mainefoliage).

“Social media has been a hit this year with people sharing their photos,” Ross said.

 

Central and southern Maine are approaching prime time to see fall foliage, said Gail Ross of the Maine Department of Agriculture. She expects this year will be a typical year for dazzling colors.  

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