Most of upstate NY, a bit further north into Maine and Canada, then down South all the way to Georgia, then East through Arkansas. There are scattered areas through Eastern Texas that look similar, and that increases a bit as you go south, before the Gulf area takes over and it becomes a bit more tropic. I'm pretty sure at least 70% of Alberta, the Dakotas, and the eastern side of the Rockies are similar as well. France, and then halfway east through Russia should be somewhat similar, and then most of Siberia that isn't Tundra or evergreens, so like 45% of Russia West of the Rockies there isn't much of that, as most everything is evergreens from there all the way up to Alaska. Dotted with such colors, but nothing like that, where it's everything.
This is what I like to call the Instagram-Effect.
To get the first picture, the photographer most probably went to 80 locations on 15 different days in fall, shooting 200 pics.
The second picture can be made any time it rains and there is glass.
It's the same concept of your former class mate being 2 grand in debt for the trip to Thailand shooting 200 pictures of her/himself on a beach to get that one picture for the internet while you're sitting in your cubicle thinking something went wrong in your life.
To get the first picture, the photographer most probably went to 80 locations on 15 different days in fall, shooting 200 pics.
The second picture can be made any time it rains and there is glass.
It's the same concept of your former class mate being 2 grand in debt for the trip to Thailand shooting 200 pictures of her/himself on a beach to get that one picture for the internet while you're sitting in your cubicle thinking something went wrong in your life.