How to Find the Fall Color Peak at the Best Locations

Point Iroquois Lighthouse, Michigan's Upper Peninsula

Point Iroquois Lighthouse, Michigan’s Upper Peninsula

Fall color will soon be sweeping the country. To make the most of it, you want to be at the right place at the right time. With some help from the internet, I will help you find the best fall color locations and arrive at the peak of the season

The fall color season progresses from north to south and from higher elevations to lower elevations. Peak fall color in Denali National Park is usually in the last week of August. The aspen at higher elevations in Rocky Mountain National Park turn a week or two ahead of lower elevations (mid to late September). In Colorado’s San Juan mountains, many of the aspen hit their peak in the first week of October. Peak color in Michigan’s U.P. occurs a week or two ahead of locations in Michigan’s lower peninsula (late September to mid October)

With a little planning and some help from the internet, you can find the best locations and avoid the disappointment of arriving too early or too late to get the photos you want. There are a number of Web sites to help you out. Some sites (like this interactive map for New Hampshire) help you plan ahead by telling you the usual time of year that the leaves hit their peak color for a given area. If your travel plans are flexible, better yet are the sites  that give you actual reports on a regular basis (like this one for Michigan’s U.P. or this one for California). Some sites (like this one for Colorado) have forums where people log in to post reports and pictures. Some sites recommend the best fall color drives and locations. An example is Darren Kilgore’s superb guide (with photos) to fall color drives in western Colorado (scroll down to “When to Go” and “Places to See”). There should be more online location guides that are as helpful as Darren’s.

I have collected a wide variety of fall color sites for the U.S. to help you arrive at the locations of your choice when the color looks great. Be sure to check out a variety of sites, including the nationwide sites at the bottom of the page. These fall color pages become active at different times during the fall. Some pages will still have last year’s reports until the fall color arrives, and some pages won’t even be available until the color season starts for that area. Check out these Fall Color Reports and Tours, make plans, grab your camera, and go have fun!

Creating the Best Fall Color Images

You are at a beautiful location at the right time of year. Now what?

Capturing beautiful fall color images means working with the light and knowing what kind of images to capture for the existing lighting conditions.  Strong, warm, directional sidelight means capturing a different kind of subject than in soft, diffused, neutral light.  Capturing beautiful images always means understanding the nuances of exposure for the best color tonalities, choosing between grand and intimate landscapes, working with high and low contrast situations, picking the best filter, increasing or decreasing depth of field, and a whole lot more. You can find all of this in Digital Photography Exposure for Dummies in the chapters on exposure, working with the light, controlling depth of field, and landscape photography. At my other photography site you can learn how this book will help you be a better photographer. It is rated 5 stars at Amazon.com. You can order Digital Photography Exposure for Dummies at this link at Amazon.com.

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You can order a print of the Pt. Iroquois lighthouse photo (above) at JimDoty.Zenfolio.com in the Michigan gallery.