Seasonal & Holidays
See Wisconsin Fall Foliage From A Zip Line
The Lake Geneva Canopy Tours is home to a 100-acre natural area and a zip line course.

LAKE GENEVA, WI β The weather in Wisconsin is beginning to turn, and one attraction in Lake Geneva allows people the chance to soar over the fall colors.
The Lake Geneva Canopy Tours is home to a 100-acre natural area and a zip line course. Riders can participate in a two-and-a-half hour tour that takes them over the treetops of some amazing fall foliage.
The tours can be booked online Lake Geneva Canopy Tours
Find out what's happening in Mount Pleasant-Sturtevantfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
By The Numbers
9 Number of Zip Lines on Canopy Tour
Find out what's happening in Mount Pleasant-Sturtevantfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
841 Longest Zip Line on Canopy Tour in feet
45 miles per hour Top Speed
5 SkyBridges
4 Spiral Stairways
18 Platforms
2-2.5 hours Duration of Canopy Tour
240 Longest SkyBridge in feet
Fall Road Trip Season Is Here
As summer wanes, itβs a good time to begin planning road trips to see one of natureβs greatest shows: the fall foliage peak, when leaves change color to blazing reds, vibrant oranges and sunny yellows. When will that happen in Wisconsin? You canβt know precisely, but thereβs a handy tool to help you plan excursions when fall foliage should be at its most spectacular.
The Fall Foliage Prediction Map, found on the Smoky Mountain National Park website, includes predictions not just for the Smokies, which rise above the Tennessee-North Carolina border, but for all 50 states.
In Wisconsin, fall colors are expected to peak around the week of Oct. 15.
Our state offers some stunning vistas, including several in state parks:
1) Peninsula State Park, 9462 Shore Rd, Fish Creek, WI 54212.
2) Devil's Lake State Park, S5975 Park Rd, Baraboo, WI 53913.
3) Governor Dodge State Park, 4175 WI-23, Dodgeville, WI 53533.
More if you want
If youβre planning a trip somewhere else, the Fall Foliage Prediction Map can help you pinpoint the best dates for a visit.
"The predictive fall leaf map helps potential travelers, photographers and leaf peepers determine the precise future date that the leaves will peak in each area of the continental United States. By utilizing the date selector at the bottom of the map, the user can visually understand how fall will progress over a region,β data scientist Wes Melton, the websiteβs chief technical officer, said in a statement.
βWe believe this interactive tool will enable travelers to take more meaningful fall vacations, capture beautiful fall photos and enjoy the natural beauty of autumn,β he said. βOur nationwide fall foliage prediction map is unique β it is one of the only fall leaf tools that provides accurate predictions for the entire continental United States."
The major factors that determine the fall foliage peak are sunlight, precipitation, soil moisture and temperature.
βNothing is 100 percent accurate,β David Angotti, the cofounder of the website told Patch, but the tool βgets pretty darned close.β
Of course, βwe can have a brilliant fall, and Mother Nature can come in with a wind storm and rip those leaves off in minutes,β Angotti said.
The website refines its predictive algorithm every year, using hundreds of thousands of data points from private and government sources, including historical and forecasted temperatures and precipitation data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, historical leaf peak trends and peak observation trends.
New maps are created from scratch every year using new data that reflects the drastic year-to-year changes, and the prediction becomes more accurate as the foliage peak nears, Melton said.
Where To Find The Best Fall Color
Angotti and his team monetize the Fall Foliage Prediction Map with Smoky Mountain cabin rentals.
βAt the time we started, we had a lot of people asking about fall color in the Smoky Mountains,β Angotti said. βWe didnβt want to give people bad advice, so we started talking with a meteorologist. The first year was pretty accurate and was very well received, and people were asking, βAre you going to do it again?ββ
That was six years ago.
βItβs our M.O. now,β Angotti said. βWe donβt have a choice.β
He admits some βbias that Tennessee has some of the best leaves in the country.β
βI honestly do believe that,β Angotti said, βbut youβll also find good color in the Blue Ridge Mountains; up in the Northeast corridor, especially Vermont and even into Virginia; the Poconos in Pennsylvania; the Colorado aspen trees; and in a lot of different areas of the country.β
What Causes The Different Colors
You probably remember from science class that the color change all starts with photosynthesis. Leaves constantly churn out chlorophyll β a key component in a plantβs ability to turn sunlight into the glucose it needs to stay healthy β from spring through early fall. Those cells saturate the leaves, making them appear green to the human eye.
But leaves arenβt green at all. Autumn is the time for leavesβ big reveal: their true color, unveiled as chlorophyll production grinds to a halt. The colors in fallβs breathtaking tapestry are influenced by other compounds, according to the national parkβs website.
Beta carotene, the same pigment that makes carrots orange, reflects the yellow and red light from the sun and gives leaves an orange hue.
The production of anthocyanin, which gives leaves their vivid red color, ramps up in the fall, protecting and prolonging the leafβs life on a tree throughout autumn.
And those yellows that make you feel as if youβre walking in a ray of sunshine?
Theyβre produced by flavonol, which is part of the flavonoid protein family. Itβs always present in leaves, but doesnβt show itself until chlorophyll production begins to slow.
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