October is the time when aspen fall colors paint many mountain forests of the Sierra Nevada. On Nevada 2024 (Friday, October 25) I hiked from the Galena Visitor Center up to Church Pond in the Mt. Rose Wilderness. Here, I am sharing a few snapshots of the aspen scenery along the way..
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Bridge over Jones Creek near the Galena Creek Visitor Center |
You don't need to walk very far from the
Galena Creek Visitor Center to stroll alongside
quaking aspen trees. There are stands next to the Jones Creek, which you can explore on the
Visitor Center Interpretive Trail.
Yet most impressive, in my opinion, are those yellow-gold bands and groves of aspen, which can best by seen by approaching steep mountain sides or finding the right vista point along a slope or ridge trail. The
Jones White Loop Trail is such a path, which also leads through a small part of the Mt. Rose Wilderness and connects with the
Church's-Pond Trail.
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Quaking aspen fork and bark |
In Nevada, not only quaking aspens display spectacular fall colors. The leaves of majestic cottonwood trees similarly turn gold or golden-orange [1].
While quaking aspen get a lot of attention for creating stunning golden vista when their heart-shaped leaves change color in the fall, the grayish white bark of aspen trees play an import role in
wildlife biology [2]:
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