Artist on Dolly Sods, Monongahela National Forest, Tucker County, Allegheny Highlands Region
Blueberry bushes on Dolly Sods burst into flame by mid-September. Photo by Ed Rehbein.

Autumn color to peak Oct. 1-10 in Tucker County, W.Va.

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Fall color in high-elevation Tucker County will peak during the first ten days of October, says Brian Sarfino, who’s worked to determine exact schedules for autumn leaf change at Dolly Sods and in the Canaan Valley in West Virginia’s Allegheny Highlands.

“Peak fall foliage comes in the first ten days of October. This is the best, most accurate advice I have ever received,” says Sarfino, marketing manager for the Tucker County Convention and Visitors Bureau.

Sarfino chronicled the leaf-change and its particulars across the region this week in a blog post in advance of the county’s Leaf-Peeper’s Festival Sept. 28-30 in Davis, W.Va.

Runners hoof-it through the historic district at Davis, West Virginia (WV). Photo courtesy Tucker County CVB.
Runners at Davis, West Virginia.

More than 3,000 leaf-peepers are expected to return to the highlands to celebrate the festival with outdoor events such as bike tours, a 5K race/walk, a golf tournament, Oktoberfest, and the Appalachian Craft & Food Fair.

Live music, a car show, a talent show, inflatable amusement rides, and all the trappings of a spectacular community fair will also be on hand.

Sarfino says he feels sure the Patterson Creek Mountain from Bear Rocks Preserve, Dolly Sods Wilderness, Potomac Branches Region Patterson Creek Mtn. from Dolly Sods[/caption]

For more information on the Leaf Peeper’s Festival and Tucker County attractions, including Dolly Sods, Canaan Valley, and Blackwater Falls, visit the Tucker County Convention and Visitors Bureau website.

Thanks to the completion of new sections of the U.S. 48 expressway to Davis, Tucker County is now a drive of less than three hours from downtown Washington, D.C., Sarfino says.

Learn more about: fall color schedules in Tucker County.

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David Sibray
Meet the Author

David Sibray

David Sibray is a West Virginia journalist, publisher, and historian who has spent more than four decades promoting the culture, communities and natural landscapes of Appalachia. He is the founder, publisher and editor-in-chief of West Virginia Explorer, a news and travel magazine devoted to the state’s history, tourism, outdoor recreation and economic development. Born in Wheeling and raised in Beckley, he attended West Virginia University and Wheeling Jesuit University. Since beginning his journalism career in the late 1980s, he has worked in publishing, public relations and destination marketing, including leadership roles with Theatre West Virginia and the Southern West Virginia Convention & Visitors Bureau. For more information, he may be reached at 304-575-7390 or at editor@wvexplorer.com

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