Mississippi Nature Guide: June 2026
June settles into a humid Mississippi summer — the breeding birds tend nests, the prairie and roadside wildflowers blaze, and the markets fill with tomatoes, blueberries, watermelons, and the first Gulf shrimp. The garden runs at full harvest as the heat takes hold.
What to look for this week
- The Delta is packed with wintering ducks and geese at their peak, and the last Christmas Bird Counts wrap up across Mississippi as Snow Geese rise in roaring clouds over the flooded fields.
- The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks in a short, sharp burst around January 3 — best after midnight from the dark, open Delta or the unlit Gulf Islands beaches.
- Cold frames and the mild coast keep collards, kale, and spinach growing; order seed early before the warm-season favorites sell out.
- Gulf oysters from the Mississippi Sound are at their cool-season prime, alongside stored Vardaman sweet potatoes and frost-sweetened greens.
Birds This Month
June is the settled heart of the Mississippi breeding season, the woods full of nesting birds raising their young. Birdsong stays strong in the early mornings before the heat builds: Northern Mockingbirds (the state bird), Indigo and Painted Buntings, Summer Tanagers, Blue Grosbeaks, Yellow-billed Cuckoos, White-eyed Vireos, and Eastern Wood-Pewees sing through the humid mornings, and the bottomland swamps ring with Prothonotary and Hooded Warblers.
Fledglings appear everywhere — begging young cardinals, Carolina wrens, mockingbirds, titmice, and bluebirds follow their parents to the feeders and gardens. Mississippi Kites nest in the Delta and the shade trees of the towns, hawking dragonflies overhead, and Swallow-tailed Kites tend nests in the southern river swamps. In the longleaf pine, Red-cockaded Woodpeckers and Bachman's Sparrows raise young, and on the Gulf coast and the barrier islands, Least Terns, Black Skimmers, Wilson's Plovers, and American Oystercatchers guard chicks on the open beaches while Brown Pelicans and Wood Storks work the warm shallows.
What's Blooming
June's wildflowers are the bold plants of full summer in Mississippi, brightest in the open prairies, roadsides, and old fields. The countryside blazes with black-eyed Susan, purple coneflower, Indian blanket (gaillardia), coreopsis, butterfly weed, horsemint (spotted beebalm), wild bergamot, rattlesnake master, and the first Queen Anne's lace and passionflower (maypop). The rare Black Belt prairie remnants reach their summer peak with prairie coneflowers, blazing star, rosinweeds, prairie clovers, and milkweeds on the chalky soils.
Along the streams and wet ditches the first scarlet cardinal flower and blue lobelia open, elderberry and buttonbush whiten the wetland edges, and the southern longleaf savannas hold their bog flora. In gardens, daylilies, gardenias, crepe myrtles (just beginning their long Southern summer bloom), hydrangeas, magnolias, zinnias, and coneflowers carry the show. The native passionflower opens its intricate purple blooms along the fences, host to the gulf fritillary. The pollinator garden hums through the long, hot, humid days.
Garden This Month
June is the garden at full summer harvest across Mississippi, the work shifting from planting to picking, watering, and pest control as the heat and humidity climb. Harvest daily to keep the plants producing: tomatoes, summer squash, zucchini, cucumbers, snap beans, sweet corn, the first okra, and the early peppers and eggplant. Keep planting and succession-sowing the true heat-lovers — okra, southern peas, sweet potatoes, and melons — which thrive as the spring crops fade.
Watering is the central task now — soak the beds deeply an inch or more a week, early in the morning, and mulch heavily to hold moisture, cool the roots, and suppress the fast weeds. The humidity drives disease and pest pressure hard: watch for squash bugs and vine borers, tomato hornworms, stink bugs, spider mites, and the fungal blights, leaf spots, and powdery mildew that thrive in the wet heat, and act fast. Pull the spent spring crops — the bolted lettuce, peas, and broccoli — side-dress the heavy feeders, and stake the tomatoes high. Provide afternoon shade for any tender greens, keep deadheading the flowers, and let the heat-loving crops carry the garden into the deep summer.
Zone 7b (northeastern hills & the north): the garden is in full production. Pick tomatoes, squash, beans, and cucumbers daily, water deeply, mulch against the heat, and watch for the squash bugs and tomato pests that arrive with summer.
Zone 8a (central Mississippi & the Delta): the harvest floods in — tomatoes, squash, beans, corn, and the first okra. Water deeply, mulch heavily, and lean into the heat-lovers as the spring crops fade; succession-sow okra and southern peas.
Zone 9a (Gulf coast): the hottest, most humid stretch begins. Harvest daily, water early, mulch deeply, and stay ahead of fungal disease and insect pressure; okra, southern peas, sweet potatoes, and peppers thrive.
What's at the Farmers Market
June is the start of peak summer abundance at Mississippi markets. Smith County tomatoes — the celebrated local crop — come into their own, joined by the year's biggest fruit: rabbiteye blueberries at full picking from the Piney Woods and southern farms, the first watermelons and cantaloupes, and ripening blackberries and peaches. The vegetable tables overflow with summer squash, zucchini, cucumbers, snap beans, sweet corn, new potatoes, and the first okra and southern peas.
Gulf shrimp, fresh off the Biloxi and coastal docks, anchor the seafood stands as the warm-water season runs. Cut flowers, fresh herbs, honey, and farm eggs brighten the markets. Choose tomatoes heavy and fragrant and keep them at room temperature, never refrigerated. Pick blueberries plump and fully blue, watermelons heavy with a creamy-yellow ground spot and a deep hollow thump, and corn the day you'll eat it, kept chilled in the husk. Buy shrimp firm and translucent with a clean sea smell, never an ammonia odor, and keep them on ice. The markets are at their generous summer height.
Night Sky This Month
June's short, warm nights around the summer solstice keep the sky lit late, but the heart of the Milky Way begins its summer climb over Mississippi's dark sites — the wide Delta, the forests of Noxubee NWR and the De Soto National Forest, Tishomingo State Park, and the unlit beaches of the Gulf Islands National Seashore. Local astronomy clubs hold summer star parties on clear, warm weekend nights.
In the evening the spring stars sink in the west while the summer sky takes over the east: the Summer Triangle of Vega, Deneb, and Altair climbs higher each night, and red Antares in Scorpius with the teapot of Sagittarius rides in the south, marking the bright, star-clouded center of the galaxy. The overhead Hercules region holds the magnificent Great Globular Cluster (M13), a fine binocular and telescope target. There is no major meteor shower this month. The short nights make June a good time for the planets and the bright deep-sky showpieces. The printable Mississippi night-sky guide lists this year's planet positions and the best dark-sky sites.
Butterflies & Pollinators
June holds Mississippi's butterfly diversity at its rich summer fullness. The swallowtails fly thick — eastern tiger, spicebush, black, giant, zebra, and pipevine swallowtails patrol gardens, river bottoms, and wood edges. The meadows and prairies hold gulf and variegated fritillaries, common buckeyes, pearl and phaon crescents, hackberry and tawny emperors, red admirals, American ladies, gray hairstreaks, and a great wealth of grass skippers.
Monarch caterpillars and summer-brood adults work the milkweed across the state. Cloudless sulphurs, sleepy oranges, little yellows, and the small gulf and coastal species drift through the open country, and the rare Black Belt prairie remnants host specialty butterflies tied to their unusual flora. Along the Gulf coast the long-tailed and silver-spotted skippers, white peacock, and southern strays appear. Watch the blooming butterfly weed, coneflower, gaillardia, horsemint, milkweed, and passionflower for clouds of nectaring butterflies, and keep a damp, sunny mud patch where the swallowtails gather to puddle. The pollinator garden is alive from dawn to dusk in the long summer days.
Trees This Month
June's Mississippi forest stands in its deepest, fullest summer canopy, and the last of the great flowering trees bloom in the heat. The Southern magnolia, the state tree, finishes its grand creamy bloom, and the crepe myrtle — the signature flowering tree of the Southern summer — bursts into long-lasting clouds of pink, white, lavender, and crimson in towns and gardens statewide, a show that will run for months. The chinkapin, catalpa, and mimosa (silktree) flower, and the sourwood in the northern hills hangs its sprays of white bells, source of a prized honey.
The fruits and seeds are swelling now: green acorns fatten on the oaks, winged samaras hang on the maples and ashes, the black cherry, blackgum (tupelo), and persimmon set their developing fruit, the mulberries finish ripening for the birds, and the pines grow out their season's green cones. In the swamps the bald cypress and water tupelo are in full feathery leaf over the dark water, and along the coast the live oaks stand in deep shade. The forest is doing the quiet, productive work of building the seed crop that will feed the coming autumn.
Go deeper with the Mississippi guides
The complete Mississippi birding, native-plant, wildflower, and night-sky guides — or the whole year in one bundle.
Same month elsewhere: June in Missouri · June in Montana · June in Nebraska