Delaware
Fall foliage in Delaware: When leaf color will peak, what’s up with leaf drop this fall

Leaf peeping from above Job’s Pond in Westmore, Vermont: Fall Foliage
John Rowe shares the first signs of the season near the Canadian border, with drone footage from over Job’s Pond in Westmore, Vermont, on Oct. 1, 2023.
John Rowe Photos via Storyful
Leaves have begun falling in Delaware, but peak fall foliage is still a couple of weeks away.
Each year, we say goodbye to summer and welcome the chilly temperatures of autumn with bonfires, pumpkin picking, and, of course, leaves changing colors.
Delaware entered the patchy phase of fall foliage on Monday, Oct. 9, when trees are still sporting green leaves but slowly begin to change to hues of fall, according to Smoky Mountains’ 2023 Fall Foliage Map & Nationwide Peak Leaf Forecast.
From there, their map shows a transition to near peak status by Oct. 16 and peak status by Oct. 16. Leaves will be past peak by Oct. 30.
According to Susan Barton, professor of plant and soil sciences at the University of Delaware, these leaf drop predictions are supported by recent weather, but fall foliage is more of the “wait and see” type and could still stand to change in the coming weeks.
“That sounds accurate, but this is not really a science. Nobody knows exactly how it’s gonna go, so I think it’s kind of a funny thing that people want to know,” said Barton said of foliage predictions like that map. “Why don’t you wait and see what happens?”
Fall leaf color change in Delaware
While leaves begin turning at different points every year, they mostly change in late September and October, with a peak in late October, an event dependent on sun exposure during the day and cool temperatures at night.
According to Barton, leaf colors typically continue to change until early November locally, but the sunnier the days and the cooler the nights, the better leaf color will be and the longer they will last before falling.
Unlike last fall in Delaware, when the state experienced a premature leaf drop due to a summer drought, this year is “basically a normal year,” said Barton, who adds that Delaware’s summer forecast of routine rains made way for the slowly falling leaves and changing leaf colors currently seen throughout the state.
Although most of this year’s leaf drop patterns have already been set based on prior weather patterns, an unexpected spell of rain and gloomy days could cause leaves to fade to brown and flutter to the ground, making for a quicker descent into mushy leaf piles not on the eyes or Instagram.
“The cool sunny days are what makes good fall color, so if we have a ton of rain, we won’t get really great fall color. If we don’t have enough sun, we won’t have great fall color,” said Barton.
Why leaves change colors
The reason leaves change from green to various rainbow shades is because the chlorophyll within each leaf begins to go away.
When the chlorophyll is removed from the leaf, the amount of sun, wind and rain can bring out other colors within the leaf, Barton previously told Delaware Online/The News Journal.
This is also why different tree species may experience leaf drop in different phases or have leaves turn colors differently from others in the area.
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What leaf colors are dominant in Delaware
In Newark, gingko trees are a common sight. They are native to China and are the last living species in a lineage that traces back over 290 million years ago.
Sweet gum trees are native species all around the state, and you might know them for the spiky gum balls they’re known to drop everywhere.
Sweet gums also have star-shaped foliage that turns yellow, purple and red once fall hits as opposed to a single color like most trees. This species can be found around the Newark Free Library.
Barton also recommends local parks or highways as great places to see a variety of changing leaf colors.
Some of her favorite areas include driving on I-95 between Newark and Wilmington, walking through White Clay Creek near the University of Delaware campus and driving on Route 1 between Smyrna and Dover.
Got a tip or a story idea? Contact Krys’tal Griffin at kgriffin@delawareonline.com.
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Delaware
Bill to regulate THC-infused drinks, gummies withdrawn in Delaware – WHYY

Heffernan, a northern New Castle County Democrat, did not respond to a request from WHYY News for comment about going back to the drawing board.
From Cirwithian’s perspective, Heffernan is doing the right thing by hitting the pause button.
“That’s amazing,” Cirwithian exclaimed. “I’m just not going to a liquor store. And then to be able to get my health and wellness advice from someone who knows what they’re talking about, who’s done the research, I’m extremely excited.”
Zoe Patchell, who heads the Delaware Cannabis Advocacy Network, agreed that Heffernan was wise to withdraw the bill “that would have had significant unintended consequences” for the hemp industry and their customers.
“The common ground between all this is the lawmakers, regulators and the local hemp businesses all agreed that regulation with testing, labeling and age restrictions are all the way to go,” Patchell said.
Patchell has said she believes CBD stores should be able to sell products with less than 0.3% of THC, which are permitted by federal law. She also said those stores, as well as the retail weed stores, should be able to sell the THC-infused drinks.
Joshua Sanderlin, who was sworn in as marijuana commissioner a month ago, told WHYY News last week that cannabis-infused drinks should be sold at retail weed stores as long as they are produced in Delaware. The 2023 law that created the legal market stipulated that the state’s retail weed stores can only sell marijuana grown in the state.
Sanderlin also said regulation of intoxicating THC products is paramount for the safety of residents.
“There are no regulations in place for these products and they are coming into the state,” Sanderlin said. “So getting some regulations around them, getting some testing on them, is the most important thing that we’re facing.”
Delaware
Lawmakers considered defanging controversial Delaware hospital cost review board

Gov. Meyer presents budget for fiscal year
Gov. Matt Meyer presented his budget for the fiscal year Thursday in Dover with an emphasis on education, housing and healthcare. 3/27/25
- Delaware lawmakers considered removing the Diamond State Hospital Cost Review Board’s power to veto hospital budgets.
- The proposal was ultimately rejected, and the board’s previously frozen funding is expected to be reinstated.
- This decision follows ongoing debate and lobbying surrounding the board’s authority to control healthcare costs.
This story was produced by Spotlight Delaware as part of a partnership with Delaware Online/The News Journal. For more about Spotlight Delaware, visit www.spotlightdelaware.org.
In the weeks since Delaware’s powerful legislative budget committee froze funding to a health care cost-cutting board, lawmakers circulated a proposal to strip the board of its chief enforcement tool, according to a copy of the proposal obtained by Spotlight Delaware.
The proposal to remove the board’s ability to veto hospital budgets struck at the heart of its central mission of forcing financial austerity onto the state’s health care systems – including Delaware’s largest and most politically influential one, ChristianaCare.
It also came after a Delaware judge ruled late last month that ChristianaCare’s legal challenge to the board’s authority over its budgets could continue.
In the end, lawmakers on the budget-setting Joint Finance Committee decided not to move forward with the proposal.
Instead, on Tuesday, June 17, they are expected to simply reinstate the frozen funds to the health care board, called the Diamond State Hospital Cost Review Board.
Senate Democratic Caucus Chief of Staff Jesse Chadderdon told Spotlight Delaware that lawmakers had discussed the proposal to strip the board of its authority over hospital budgets, but failed to gain a consensus on the matter among the members who sit on the Joint Finance Committee.
The measure to reinstate $1 million that had been frozen from the board two weeks ago was a more palatable proposal, Chadderdon said.
Still, cuts to another $1.5 million in reserve funds, which had been in place for the board’s litigation and other costs, will remain.
The fact that legislators, especially those in the State Senate, even considered such a proposal is notable, as statehouse Democrats have defended the merits and need of the board over the objections of Republicans and hospital leaders for more than a year.
It is not immediately clear why lawmakers on the Joint Finance Committee want to undo the funding freeze that they approved just two weeks ago. Chadderdon asserted that the original freeze was unconstitutional.
When asked about Tuesday’s meeting and about the proposal that had been considered, Rep. Kim Williams (D-Stanton), who chairs the Joint Finance Committee, said simply that the committee is meeting to discuss language in the state’s budget that pertains to the hospital cost review board.
What would the proposal have done?
According to the draft copy of the legislation, which was to be inserted as epilogue language to the annual state operating budget, lawmakers had considered stripping the board of the ability to punish hospital systems that are not compliant with its efforts to rein in costs, including making changes to their budget.
It would leave a board that was largely tasked with obtaining currently private revenue and expenditure information that would better inform the public of the operation of its hospital systems and writing performance improvement plans for those found to be exceeding cost-containment goals set by the state.
If a hospital system failed to execute an improvement plan though, the board would only be able to extend or amend such a plan, but have no way of enforcing it.
It would also push back implementation of the law to next year.
Fight has drawn on
In all, the developments mark the latest chapter in more than a year of lobbying surrounding the board tasked with bringing down hospital costs in Delaware, which are among the highest in the country.
It began last spring when hospital board members and administrators flooded Dover wearing white coats in efforts to oppose the bill that created the Diamond State Hospital Cost Review Board.
It continued late last year when two opposing local lobbying forces – the Delaware Hospital Association and a coalition of public sector unions – each pressured then-Gov. John Carney over whether to nominate members to the newly created state board.
Carney, who at the time was in his final months as governor, was seen as more supportive of the hospital cost review board than his successor Gov. Matt Meyer.
Delaware Hospital Association President Brian Frazee told Spotlight Delaware then that Meyer had shown a willingness to make changes to the law that created the board.
Frazee also said then that his group’s primary complaint was with the review board’s legal authority to modify hospital budgets that its members deem excessive. His comments followed assertions from ChristianaCare that the board threatens the hospital’s ability “to care for the community.”
But, public sector unions countering Frazee’s lobbying pointed to high health costs in Delaware, and argued in a letter to the governor last year that large portions of the state government’s budget “are being devoured by unchecked health care costs that continue to rise faster than the rate of inflation.”
Ultimately, Carney did appoint five members of the board in the waning days of his term and Meyer has added two more. They have met a handful of times but have not advanced the mission of the board in significant ways to date.
Lobbying has since sustained through this year’s legislative session, including last month when Delaware Healthcare Association and other nonprofits sent a joint letter to lawmakers urging them to postpone the implementation of the cost review board for one year.
In response, the coalition of state worker unions again sent a competing letter, calling on the legislature to “reject the Delaware Healthcare Association’s latest request to delay the Board’s work.”
What followed was the Joint Finance Committee decision to freeze funding to the hospital cost review board.
Williams, the committee chair, told Spotlight Delaware then that her decision to pause the funding wasn’t influenced by lobbying.
Instead, she said the state should not continue to pay to implement a board “whose future is so uncertain.”
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Delaware
June 20 Summer Solstice: Delaware Bayshore Byway named top sunrise spot


This year’s Summer Solstice is just days away, and a couple Delaware locations are among the best spots in the nation to view the sunrise. (Photo by BillionPhotos.com/Adobe Stock)
As the summer solstice approaches on June 20, a recent national survey shows where First Staters should go: the Bayshore Byway.
A survey of more than 3,000 people by Gunther Mazda revealed what residents think the best place in the state to watch the sunrise is, and one of the most breathtaking spots in the country to mark the start of summer.
The Delaware Bayshore Byway, a quiet stretch of Route 9 near the Little Creek Wildlife Area, ranked No. 56 out of 100 top locations across the U.S. for watching the solstice sunrise. Port Mahon Road, also near Little Creek, came in at No. 97.
Known for its scenic tidal marshes and coastal creeks, the Bayshore Byway offers a peaceful escape for early risers.
According to survey participants, the road’s early-morning mist, abundant birdlife, and tranquil setting make it an ideal location for reflecting on the year’s longest day.
READ: Lidl to open new store in Newark on July 11
Further down the list but still notable, Port Mahon Road was praised for its unobstructed views of the Delaware Bay, where orange and pink hues stretch across the water as the sun rises.
Though well-known to local fishermen, the road remains something of a hidden gem for sunrise seekers.
The survey, conducted in anticipation of the summer solstice, asked Americans: “Based on your own experience, where’s the most breathtaking place to drive to and watch the sunrise on the summer solstice?”
Top national honors went to Mauna Kea Access Road in Hawaii, followed by California’s Sunrise Highway, Virginia’s Blue Ridge Parkway and Skyline Drive, and Alaska’s Chilkat River Scenic Byway.
Gunther Mazda also released an infographic highlighting the top sunrise drive in each U.S. state.
“The summer solstice is the longest stretch of daylight we get all year – and there’s no better way to make the most of it than getting behind the wheel and chasing the sunrise,” says Joseph Gunther IV at Gunther Mazda. “These drives aren’t just about the destination. They’re about the early-morning roads, the changing light, and the sense of freedom that only a great drive can give you.”
For Delaware residents and visitors alike, the survey serves as a reminder that some of the most beautiful moments of summer begin just down the road — as long as you’re willing to wake up early.


Raised in Doylestown, Pennsylvania, Jarek earned a B.A. in journalism and a B.A. in political science from Temple University in 2021. After running CNN’s Michael Smerconish’s YouTube channel, Jarek became a reporter for the Bucks County Herald before joining Delaware LIVE News.
Jarek can be reached by email at [email protected] or by phone at (215) 450-9982. Follow him on Twitter @jarekrutz and on LinkedIn.
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