November sky--white-gray and winter feel, bare trees and brown leaves and cold wind. Historically, November is the cloudiest month in Chicago. November sky---The stormy iron-gray sky and hurricane-force winds that sunk the Edmund Fitzgerald in Lake Superior forty-eight years ago on November 10.
But not today--the sky today---sun and cloudless blue! And the leaves falling in that light, and the colors on the almost-bare branches of the trees...There's a slight breeze chasing the leaves down the streets. It's a beautiful fall day.
Yes, the sky really looks more blue in the fall. According to Accuweather, this is due to drier air, and the angle of the sun at this time of year. The contrast with the colored leaves is also a part of it.
This period of mild, dry weather after the first frost is still sometimes called Indian Summer in North America. In European folklore, this time before winter cold really sets in has other names--little summer, poor man's summer, grandmother summer. You can read more here.
It is said the veil between the worlds grows thin when the leaves start to fall, and the sky is wide open and blue. And maybe we can imagine spirits, ancestors and loved ones, dancing with the leaves....
Update November 15---another beautiful blue sky day---this is the longest streak of sun and blue sky days in mid-November in 22 years!
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