Kouyou, while literally meaning "crimson leaves," is the term given nore generally to the time period when the leaves are changing colors in the fall. It's a time to say goodbye to the old season and welcome (or dread) the onset of winter. It's a time when people wax nostalgic, getting that faraway look in their eyes as they hold a mug of hot drink and sigh, "this year's kouyou is really beautiful, isn't it..."
[It also mirrors the cherry-blossom-madness that will come half a year from now, in the spring.]
Right now, people are flocking to the areas most dense with deciduous foliage. There, they can observe the striking red-orange of momiji (Japanese maple) against the pure yellow of the ichou (ginkgo), and all the shades in-between. At scenic viewpoints, they can breathe in the coming of winter and revel in nature's metaphors.
If you're curious, here are some kouyou jouhou (kouyou information) charts I found on the web today -- just a few of hundreds, probably. You can see that this is an obsession for them -- not a hobby. I would guess it's the product of a culture's singular devotion to nature (on the whole -- whale and dolphin issues aside!) and chronic dependence on weather-talk.

via Walker plus (prob for nature lovers)

via weathernews

via Yahoo! weather
I hope I get to see some pretty kouyou this weekend!
(The links will all probably be dead after December.)
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