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🍁 Leaves in limbo

Plus: 🏈 On the road | Friday, September 27, 2024
 
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Axios Columbus
By Alissa Widman Neese · Sep 27, 2024

It's Friday. Hurricane Helene is making its way inland and we're starting to feel some of its effects.

🌧️ Today's weather: Rainy and windy, with highs in the 70s.

🥳 Situational awareness: Today is our newsletter's third anniversary! Help us celebrate by becoming a member. Your contribution will support our work and allow us to do more of it.

  • Plus: Join by midnight tonight and you could win a $100 gift card to a local restaurant.
  • Existing members are automatically entered. Rules apply.

Today's newsletter is 576 words — a 2-minute read.

 
 
1 big thing: 🍂 Your fall foliage forecast
By
 
Small multiples map showing predicted fall foliage progression from September 30 to October 21, 2024. By early October, the northernmost parts of the U.S. are expected to reach peak color change.
Data: SmokyMountains.com; Map: Axios Visuals

Bad news, leaf peepers: Fall photo ops may be harder to find this season due to Ohio's historic drought.

Why it matters: Nearly the entire state is currently experiencing some level of drought and our region is one of the most affected.

  • David Parrott, fall color forester for the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, tells Axios the prolonged dry conditions will make many trees change colors in sporadic and unpredictable ways.

Yes, but: Some Central Ohio trees are already changing, so you can get your fall fix earlier than normal if you know where to look.

  • Less drought-resistant trees like maples and sycamores are most likely to be changing. Others will still pop their peak color at normal times.

Pro tip: ODNR provides weekly online updates of the best fall foliage viewing spots. The first came out Wednesday.

What they're saying: Keeping an eye on the website will be especially beneficial this year because "there may not be a steady pattern of change across the state," Parrott says. Typically, fall color progresses north to south.

  • Some leaves may also prematurely brown and dry out.
  • "Leaf peepers will need to be fluid with their travel plans," he cautions.

Threat level: Parrott also notes that dry leaf piles will heighten the risk of wildfires.

  • A ban on open burning is in effect for 37 counties, including Franklin, as of yesterday.
  • Though rain is finally falling this week, we'll likely need much more than just a few days of precipitation to reverse the drought's effects, a meteorologist told us last week.

What we're watching: The smokymountains.com fall foliage prediction map says to expect "peak," if patchy, conditions in our region the week of Oct. 21.

💭 Alissa's thought bubble: I guess this explains why my yard was already covered in dry maple leaves when I returned from Minnesota on Wednesday.

📸 Go deeper: A beginner's guide to local leaf peeping from Experience Columbus.

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2. Nutshells: Your local news roundup
 
Illustration of a buckeye nut walking.

Illustration: Brendan Lynch/Axios

 

⚾ The Clippers lost to Omaha 7-3 in last night's International League Championship game, ending their playoff run. (MLB)

📫 Free COVID tests are available again from the federal government, with a limit of four per household. Orders will start shipping next week. (Axios)

🎵 Local rock band Beartooth will play a homecoming concert at the Schottenstein Center on Jan. 18, 2025. It'll be their first time headlining a U.S. arena. (WSYX-TV)

🌽 Organizers of a cornhole tournament in the Brewery District are celebrating their 10th anniversary of fundraising for area nonprofits. (614 Magazine)

🏈 It's also been 10 years since former Ohio State coach and linebacker Anthony Schlegel body-slammed a student who ran on the field.

Quote du jour

"I would love to know what he did before that game. It must have been a banger or one hell of a tailgate."
— Schlegel, to the Dispatch, in a story recapping the odd and often-memed moment of Buckeye history.
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A message from Instagram

New Instagram Teen Accounts: Automatic protections for teens
 
 

Instagram is launching Teen Accounts in September, with built-in protections limiting who can contact teens and the content they can see. Plus, only parents can approve safety setting changes for teens under 16.

The impact: More protections for teens, and peace of mind for parents.

Learn more.

 
 
3. ✈️ On the road again
By and
 
Table showing the total mileage NFL teams will travel in the 2024-25 regular season. The Los Angeles Chargers, Miami Dolphins, Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots will travel the most, each over 25,000 total miles in their road games.
Data: Bookies.com; Table: Axios Visuals

The Browns and Bengals are back on the road this weekend, with Sunday games in Las Vegas and Charlotte, respectively.

Yes, but: They won't be nearly as well-traveled as other NFL teams this season, as the above chart shows.

🌎 Fun fact: Four teams will travel this season more miles than the distance around the Earth.

Go deeper: A longtime Los Angeles Chargers equipment manager told Axios' Maxwell Millington what it takes to coordinate an NFL road trip. Read the story.

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A message from Instagram
Introducing Instagram Teen Accounts: A new experience for teens, guided by parents. Learn more.
 

A message from Instagram

Teen Accounts: A new protected experience for teens, guided by parents
 
 

Starting in September, Instagram Teen Accounts have automatic protections for who can contact teens and the content they can see. Plus, only parents can approve safety setting changes for teens under 16.

What this means: Built-in protections for teens, and peace of mind for parents.

Learn more.

 

📬 Subscribe to Axios Cleveland for the latest Browns news, including stadium updates and weekly game recaps.

Thanks to Tyler Buchanan for editing today's newsletter.

Our picks:

🎂 Tyler wishes his son a happy birthday!

🤞 Alissa is hoping to visit the zoo's Lantern Festival on Sunday, its last day, if the weather holds out.

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