The sun rose this morning at 6:43 and sets at 8:58 tonight for 14 hours 18 ½ minutes of daylight. We’re losing 6 minutes 40 seconds a day, now, and that will stay pretty constant for the rest of September. We had over an hour of astronomical night last night, which means the sun is now dipping more than 18° below the horizon, but it’s making up for it at solar noon—less than 32° above the horizon.
It’s getting colder, too. Last night’s forecast was for 30° to 40° F, and I managed to get out just before dark to get the geraniums in the garage and the plastic covers over the squash and beans. Picked the first almost-ripe tomato, and covered the rest.
Our deciduous trees are mostly birch and aspen, which turn yellow in the fall, and they are definitely turning. The fireweed and the highbush cranberries do turn red, so we have some red mixed with the
yellow and green. It won’t be long, though, before most of the green comes from the spruce. Already the lawn is sprinkled with yellow leaves. The lilies are getting in the last blooms of the season, and the garden is supplying me with beets and zucchini almost faster than I can eat them.
Daytime temperatures still get into the 70’s at times, but 60’s and even 50’s are getting more common. No snow yet, but non-sticking flurries are not uncommon in September. In fact I remember one year when the snow cover was well established by the end of September. I hope it doesn’t do that this year!







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Right now, all this makes me want to live up there. I’ll wait to see what your winter entries do to me!
Wow, love those observations of nature and the very clear signs of seasonal change. We kid ourselves its still summer when we have these lovely fine days, but the sun and light and the few leaves that haven’t resisted sun and wind lying dead on the ground are proof that nature’s cycles predominate.
And as one thing finishes blooming, something else is coming into its own.
Your upcoming classes sound stimulating, good luck with that, I hope you make the two that you’re on the wait list for and how wonderful that they give you so much inspiration, dinosaurs in Alaska, that sounds intriguing.
Yes, there have been quite a few dinosaur fossils recovered in the last ten years or so, and magnetism frozen into the rocks proves they lived at a higher latitude than they are found today. I’ll probably blog about it a little when I’m taking the class.
Hi Sue,
I love following your weather reports for Alaska! It’s fascinating and gives a real insight into such a little known place. (Well, for us here in the UK, anyhow). The first leaves are just beginning to turn here in Wales, and there’s just a hint of autumn in the air, but I’m near the coast so we usually have little sign of frost or snow until Christmas.
I’m picking the tomatoes from my polytunnel. I hope you enjoyed yours!
Juliet