Daily Mail

Our green and pleasant land now ...while brown leaves are falling looks like the Sahara desert...like it’s autumn in August!

- By David Wilkes

leaves cover the ground in a crisp carpet of golden brown in scenes more familiar in autumn.

august has only just begun and summer does not officially end for nearly eight weeks. But extreme temperatur­es and a lack of water have caused ‘stressed’ trees to drop leaves early, say experts. Our pictures show the extent of the phenomenon after the record-breaking heatwave and dry spell.

In one picture, children are seen playing with lime tree flowers, which are often shed now, and leaves in ascot, Berkshire. Trees shed leaves to conserve moisture within the trunk and keep it from drying out.

sally Bavin, from the Woodland Trust, said: ‘lack of water causes stress to trees and they’re not able to photosynth­esize effectivel­y. They can’t support the leaves so they shed them.’ she said there have been reports of autumn tinting on leaves from trees including horse chestnut, rowan, hazel, field maple and ash since mid- July.

The trust is urging people to report such sightings to its Nature’s Calendar project, which uses observatio­ns to predict how wildlife will be affected as the climate changes. Yesterday, the Royal Horticultu­ral society’s Guy Barter warned gardeners:

‘Soil moisture left over from winter usually keeps plants going well enough until late July, but this month expect to see more stressed plants with red/brown leaves and leaf-shedding.’

He told the Mail people need not worry, saying: ‘Because most plants are so brilliantl­y adapted, they can be left to shed their leaves. Autumn will arrive, the remaining leaves will be shed, winter rains will come and it will all go on as normal.’

In another example of the effects of the dry weather, a large crack opened up on Primrose Hill, North London, yesterday. A spokesman for Royal Parks, which manages the area, said: ‘This crack is a result of the warm weather and lack of rain. The landscape maintenanc­e team will be filling in the worst of the cracks before the weekend.’

July was the driest in England since 1935, and the most parched on record for East Anglia, the South- East and southern England, according to provisiona­l statistics from the Met Office. The UK saw just 56 per cent (46.3mm) of its average rainfall for July, making it the driest in more than 20 years and continuing a run of all months, bar February, being drier than average in 2022.

A UK record high temperatur­e of 40.3c was recorded at RAF Coningsby, Lincolnshi­re, on July 19.

 ?? ?? Scorched earth: The usually verdant expanse of South-East London’s Blackheath shows the dramatic effect of the dry spell and record temperatur­es on grassland
Scorched earth: The usually verdant expanse of South-East London’s Blackheath shows the dramatic effect of the dry spell and record temperatur­es on grassland
 ?? ?? Brown Windsor: Snow Hill in Windsor Great Park, Berks, has never been less aptly named
Brown Windsor: Snow Hill in Windsor Great Park, Berks, has never been less aptly named
 ?? ?? Park and dried: Walkers strolling through a parched Richmond Park
Park and dried: Walkers strolling through a parched Richmond Park
 ?? ?? Jumping for joy: Brothers William and Oliver Beran playing with the fallen leaves in Ascot, Berks
Golden carpet: A fitness fan going for a walk in London’s leaf-littered Regent’s Park yesterday
Jack rustle? No, it’s cockapoo Nala having fun in South-West London
Jumping for joy: Brothers William and Oliver Beran playing with the fallen leaves in Ascot, Berks Golden carpet: A fitness fan going for a walk in London’s leaf-littered Regent’s Park yesterday Jack rustle? No, it’s cockapoo Nala having fun in South-West London

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