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Green leaves in mid-December

Under the big oak at the end of my road – one of my favourite trees in London.

There’s been plenty of things I’ve been meaning to blog about lately – Alabama 3 at Jamm in Brixton playing an amazing acoustic set (with our West country buddies J.E.V.E. rocking to a full house), Christmas madness on Oxford and Regent Street, how Apple makes geekery cool, the del.icio.us buyout by Yahoo! and our lovely new flat (got the keys last night, whoop!) – to name a few.

But the overriding concern on my mind at the moment is why are there still green leaves on the trees in mid-December?

I wasn’t here last year to see this change in seasons to remember when exactly things happen but I’m sure the leaves should have fallen by now. I haven’t even kicked through any large piles of unsuspecting leaves this year (not easy in London but there’s normally the odd heap, trapped by the wind in a street corner, just waiting to be kicked about).

What’s going on?

Discuss
2 Comments
  1. Spana says:

    Apparently the experts at Kew predicted that leavees would still be on the trees at Christmas. But don’t get knickers in a twist about Global Warming – throughout history we’ve had peaks and troughs like this…

    Being back in Europe has been a treat for Autumnal Glory… and who knows, maybe some snow for xmas. I love Blighty.

  2. Fred says:

    A great gig, indeed. As for the trees, my theory is the seasons are shifting.

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