The Guardian view on the pleasures of autumn

It will be a difficult winter, but the natural world brings small, precious consolations

As different parts of the UK find themselves under varying degrees of restriction, as indoor pleasures dwindle for many, the outdoors may provide some shred of solace, some healing connection to nature. Impervious to human travails, autumn happens to be putting on a particularly spectacular extended show this year, thanks to a damp August and sunny September. In some parts of the UK acers, or Japanese maples, are now entering the period of their most vivid crimson pomp; Amelanchier lamarckii, or the juneberry, is shedding its delicate apricot autumn foliage to reveal its handsome dark branches; oaks are on the turn towards a warm yellow.

Observing this seasonal drama is called momijigari in Japan – or “leaf-peeping” – and the National Trust notes that the British are becoming more susceptible, at this time of crisis, to its pleasures. It is also a remarkable year for apples and honey-scented quinces – indeed, for fruit and berries of all kinds, from rowan and sloe to spindleberry and holly. For those lucky enough to have a garden, raking is now a seasonal task and ritual, the rich scent of rain on fallen leaves a small pleasure to be savoured. To plant daffodil bulbs and sweet pea seeds is to engage in small acts of optimism and expectation – it is to insist that there is something to look forward to.

In parks and gardens alike, there’s a last spectacular showing of colour: flushes of late roses; dahlias and salvias still going strong. Messy banks of purple Michaelmas daisies are still attracting bees – as are, in the south, the musty-scented, autumn-flowering blooms of clambering ivy, which also provide sustenance for moths and hoverflies. Nerines, autumn-flowering crocuses, and wild cyclamens are putting out their delicate flowers, welcome signs of new life as the year blazes and fades. Gardens, in general, are dishevelled but joyous in October, like a relaxed guest at a party, flushed and happy and faintly anarchic, no longer on best behaviour.

Garden birds are getting hungry once more for seeds and nuts – good news for human spectators of the avian theatre offered by great tits and the like as they bicker and flutter round garden feeders. Charms of goldfinches are making greedy incursions on nodding sunflower heads. Autumn migrations are in full swing: the chaffinch population is being swelled by those returning from Scandinavia. The occasional chattering flock of siskins might be seen even in cities. A walk – whether urban, suburban or rural – serves for many to clear the head, and if it involves kicking through crisp brown leaves, then so much the better.

The clocks go back in the UK this weekend. It can be hard to summon up enthusiasm for autumn’s diminishing days, for a winter that seems to spread out dismally ahead, with rising infections, redundancies, and family members often kept apart. Enjoying small seasonal pleasures cannot be much of a consolation to those who have lost a job, or face a collapse in earnings, or who are sick, or anxious about their loved ones. But the beauty of autumn is not quite nothing. Do not pass a late rose without first smelling it.

Contributor

Editorial

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
The Guardian view on autumn: as summer ends, fresh starts abound
Editorial: Though the days turn cold and the night draws in, we should not mourn; this time of year is full of richnesses and new beginnings too

Editorial

17, Sep, 2021 @5:12 PM

Article image
Country diary: the west wind carries a note of change
Coombs Dale, Derbyshire: This fresh breeze has a keener edge than the warm fronts of summer

Ed Douglas

23, Aug, 2019 @4:30 AM

Article image
Country diary: honeysuckle is the last port in a storm for this hoverfly
Wenlock Edge, Shropshire: A little wonder occurs when, like planetary alignments, fly, flower and sunlight dock together

Paul Evans

10, Oct, 2019 @4:30 AM

Article image
The Guardian view on restoring lost rights of way: in search of beauty | Editorial
Editorial: The huge response to a campaign to put forgotten public footpaths back on the map shows how much we value access to the natural environment

Editorial

03, Nov, 2020 @6:44 PM

Article image
The Guardian view on this false autumn: an uncanny beauty | Editorial
Editorial: Across Britain we are witnessing processes that look familiar but are too early and not what they seem. We must use them as a warning to act

Editorial

28, Aug, 2022 @5:25 PM

Article image
Country diary: narcissi spring from a derelict market garden
St Dominic, Tamar Valley: Muddy ways, once trodden by donkeys carrying corn to the mill, are littered with spent catkins and lichened branches

Virginia Spiers

21, Mar, 2019 @5:30 AM

Article image
Country diary: shrubby cinquefoil is an epitome of wildness and tenacity
Forest-in-Teesdale, County Durham: In decline as a native species, Potentilla fruticosa has clung to rocks here for millennia

Phil Gates

16, Oct, 2019 @4:30 AM

Article image
The Guardian view on guerrilla gardening: go forth and grow | Editorial
Editorial: Requiring councils to list neglected public land on which to plant fruit and vegetables would be a good thing

Editorial

06, May, 2022 @5:28 PM

Article image
Country diary: wasps lead the dance at the year's last flower festival
Wenlock Edge, Shropshire: I can only imagine how powerful the sweetness of ivy flowers is to insects with high-energy lives

Paul Evans

03, Oct, 2018 @4:30 AM

Article image
Country diary: After the harvest, the wildflower opportunists have moved in | Phil Gates
Teesdale, North Pennines: Before the plough returns, there’s time to enjoy field pansy and cut-leaved cranesbill, thriving in bare earth

Phil Gates

06, Oct, 2023 @4:30 AM