Text Box: Freda Lucas enjoys her 95th birthday honored by family, friends and staff.  Along with cake and ice cream there were many hugs and kisses and happy birthday wishes.
Text Box: 95  Years Young

95  Years Young

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Jarvis Law Office Presets Elderly Law

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Mothballs in My Attic

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Employee of the Month

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November  Birthdays


Birth

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I am Thankful

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Thanksgiving Casserole

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Text Box: CHATTER ON THE HILL
Text Box:  Barnesville Health Care Center
Text Box: Why do Fall Leaves Change Color?

As summer ends and autumn comes, the days get shorter and shorter. This is how the trees "know" to begin getting ready for winter.

During winter, there is not enough light or water for photosynthesis. The trees will rest, and live off the food they stored during the summer. They begin to shut down their food-making factories. The green chlorophyll disappears from the leaves. As the bright green fades away, we begin to see yellow and orange colors. Small amounts of these colors have been in the leaves all along. We just can't see them in the summer, because they are covered up by the green chlorophyll.

The bright reds and purples we see in leaves are made mostly in the fall. In some trees, like maples, glucose is trapped in the leaves after photosynthesis stops. Sunlight and the cool nights of autumn cause the leaves turn this glucose into a red color. The brown color of trees like oaks is made from wastes left in the leaves.   It is the combination of all these things that make the beautiful colors we enjoy in the fall autumn leaves scene.