Fall Images
November 18, 2011
The 2011 fall foliage season is rapidly coming to an end in Arkansas. Travelers will notice a small amount of late-season color remaining during the weekend but nothing widespread.
We hope you found the weekly updates to be beneficial. Look for 2012 reports beginning in late September.
Where and When to Go, Where to Find Information, What Roads to Take
Scenic Drives Information for Fall in Arkansas
Talimena Scenic Drive near Mena
Planning your fall colors tour
Each year, we look forward to the coming of fall. Even the most avid
sun worshipers are now ready to dig out their long-sleeved shirts and
begin planning driving tours and favorite outdoor activities around the
changing of the leaves. But predicting fall color is no easier than
forecasting the weather. Below are details of what is considered the
norm for fall color in Arkansas - these are not predictions. Since the
fall color season in Arkansas is an extremely popular travel month, we
strongly suggest you make your reservations as soon as possible,
especially if you are coming on a weekend.
To keep visitors informed regarding the progress of fall color, the
Arkansas Department of Parks and Tourism has a network of color spotters
in every region of the state each fall who have volunteered to supply
weekly updates. This information is combined into one report,
available by 5 p.m. Central Time each Thursday throughout the fall, so
that everyone can make plans for the weekend.
The reports describe foliage changes in these three regions:
northwest/north central Arkansas (Ozarks),
central Arkansas/Ouachita Mountains,
and southern/eastern Arkansas.
Specific areas and highways are identified when possible.
Traditional Peak Color Times in Arkansas
Sunset in the Arkansas River Valley
Arkansas fall foliage vacations should be planned around the peak color times of each region of the state. Generally, significant color change begins in the Ozarks of northern Arkansas in late September or early October. The trees in central Arkansas and the Ouachita
mountain range of west central Arkansas are changing noticeably by
early to mid-October. Southern and eastern Arkansas foliage usually
begins changing during mid-October. Most people, however, are more
interested in a fall colors tour during the "peak" of color. There is usually a period of a week
or so when the fall foliage in a particular area is at its best.
The peak may be for a large area of the forest, or different areas may
peak at different times, even though they are close to each other, making it tricky to plan fall foliage vacations.
Normally, the peak of color occurs around two or three weeks after
color changes begin, meaning late October for the Ozarks, late October
or early November for central and western Arkansas, and early to
mid-November for the southern and eastern sections.
What signals can we watch for to indicate the beginning of the fall color season?
Cossatot River State Park & Natural Area
Look for splashes of red in your favorite area of green hardwoods.
Here's a short list of foliage that changes early in Arkansas, and the
color(s) they are likely to display: blackgum (red), hickory (yellow),
sassafras (red, orange, or yellow), sweetgum (red, yellow, or purple),
red maple (red, yellow, or orange), dogwood (brownish red), poison ivy
and poison oak (red), sumac (red), and buckeye (red).
Autumn in Arkansas is anything but one-dimensional with a bumper crop of fall festivals and special events, the flamboyant fall foliage,
the harvest season, and the crisper, downward turn of temperatures. The
most popular way to enjoy the splashy color of autumn in Arkansas is
just to get out and do it on a fall colors tour. The color change begins in early October in
the Ozarks of northern Arkansas...moves slowly to the south...until it
reaches the peak of color in late October and early November. Yellows,
reds, oranges, golds- even deep purple-overtake the maples, sumac, sweet
gum, oak, sassafras, and hickory. The state has two-and-a-half million
acres of national forests... the Ozark, the Ouachita (Wash-i-taw) and the St. Francis...where the beauty of the season shines.
AREA ONE: The Ozark Mountain region begins its color change at
the end of September and early October, with the black gums taking on
brilliant red tones. The peak usually occurs in late October.
AREA TWO: The Ouachitas and Arkansas River Valley take on
color within a week or so following the Ozarks, beginning in early to
mid-October. Early November is normally the peak time for this area.
AREA THREE: The Delta (east) and Gulf Coastal Plain (south) are usually transformed by early to mid-November.