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The Colors of the Season

Places to Enjoy Fall Foliage

By Shelly Hemig

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A good place to take a drive, according to the Official Travel and Adventure Site of Montana is along the Seeley-Swan Highway (Montana Hwy. 83), also found in western Montana. From mid-September through November, the golden yellows from the western larch, aspen and cottonwood trees line the road.

However, Logerstedt says she prefers to walk. "Some of the most enjoyable times I've had have been walking with my children in our neighborhood and purposing to find many different colors, shapes and sizes of leaves, which they all collect in their specially designed leaf bags," she says. "The part we like best is finding a big pile of leaves somewhere and tossing them up high into the air so that they shower down on us, sometimes even sticking to our clothing."

Oregon

A great place to check out the changing colors of the leaves in Oregon is along the McKenzie Pass-Santiam Pass Scenic Byway. This 82-mile loop takes you up and down through two Cascade range passes. There are views of Mt. Washington, the Three Sisters and Mt. Jefferson, as well as the McKenzie River, which is followed for 26 miles by a national recreation trail, in case you'd rather hike.

You'll drive through Deschutes and Willamette National Forests, and the tree to watch for is the vine maple, whose leaves turn a marvelous shade of reddish-purple.

Georgia

"Beyond a shadow of a doubt, this is the time to be in the Southeast," says Rober Ordner, a licensed clinical social worker from Norcross, Ga. "The whole place is on fire with color."


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