In the backyard, the volunteer Japanese maple is outdoing itself: its bright scarlet hue shining in the sun that is just now touching the back fence.
Closer to the house, the black gum's final leaves flutter like tiny, opalescent flags. Their color is a magnet, drawing the eye. As I look more closely, I see two young upstart black gums right behind the tall one. How is it that I'd never noticed this before, never used the fall color not just as inspiration but as information, another clue to naming names in the natural world?