Florida Nature Guide: January 2026
January is the heart of Florida's mild dry season — its prime visiting and gardening month, when wintering ducks and warblers fill the marshes, manatees crowd the warm springs, and the Everglades wading-bird show peaks. The vegetable garden is in full swing while the rest of the country lies frozen, and the cool, dry nights bring some of the year's clearest skies.
What to look for this week
- The Christmas Bird Count season peaks across Florida, with Merritt Island and the Everglades tallying huge numbers of wintering ducks, spoonbills, and wood storks.
- The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks in a brief, sharp burst around January 3 — best after midnight from the dark Kissimmee Prairie or Big Cypress.
- The cool-season vegetable garden is in full production statewide; harvest broccoli, collards, and lettuce, and keep frost cloth ready in the north.
Birds This Month
January is the peak of Florida's winter birding, when the cool dry weather and the great concentrations of birds make it the best month to be in the field. At Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge on the Space Coast, the Black Point Wildlife Drive teems with Northern Pintail, American Wigeon, Blue-winged Teal, Northern Shoveler, and Lesser Scaup, mixed with crowds of Roseate Spoonbills, Wood Storks, White and Glossy Ibis, Reddish Egrets, and the tall pink-and-white flush of feeding herons. In Everglades National Park and along the Anhinga Trail, the dropping dry-season water concentrates fish, and Wood Storks, Great Egrets, Anhingas, Purple Gallinules, and alligators gather at the remaining pools.
This is also the month of specialties. The endemic Florida Scrub-Jay can be found in protected scrub at Merritt Island, Lake Wales Ridge, and Ocala; the Snail Kite hunts apple snails over Lake Kissimmee and the Loxahatchee marshes; and Limpkins wail from the spring runs and river edges. At St. Marks NWR on the Panhandle, wintering Northern Harriers, Bald Eagles, and sparrows work the salt marsh, while feeders and live oaks statewide fill with wintering Yellow-rumped, Palm, and Pine Warblers, Painted and Indigo Buntings in the south, and the resident Northern Mockingbird, the state bird, singing from fence posts.
What's Blooming
Florida barely pauses its bloom in January, and the mild dry season keeps color along the roadsides and in the hammocks while the rest of the country is bare. The hardy daisy Spanish needles (Bidens alba) flowers nearly year-round on disturbed ground and field edges, feeding butterflies through the warm spells, and the bright yellow beggarticks and narrowleaf silkgrass persist on dry ground. In the south, the dry season is the showy time — firebush, lantana, necklacepod, and blanketflower keep nectar flowing in coastal and hammock gardens.
The hammocks and swamps hold their tropical and evergreen flora: red and black mangroves stand dark-leaved along the south coast, and the air plants — native bromeliads (Tillandsia) and the masses of Spanish moss — drape the live oaks and cypress. In central and south Florida gardens and groves, the first orange blossoms — the state flower — perfume the warm afternoons as the citrus sets fruit, and tropical ornamentals like hibiscus, bougainvillea, and powderpuff bloom on through the frost-free coast. Even the wild coontie cycad holds its bright orange seed cones in the southeast hammocks.
Garden This Month
January is Florida's prime vegetable-gardening month — its inverted calendar makes the mild, dry winter the main growing season while northern gardens lie frozen. The cool-season garden is in full production across the state: harvest broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, collards, kale, lettuce, carrots, beets, radishes, and English peas, and keep sowing successive plantings of greens, lettuce, and root crops in the warm soil. In central and south Florida, frost-tender tomatoes, peppers, beans, and squash grow on through the dry season.
The chief winter task is frost protection. In north and north-central Florida, hard freezes still arrive — keep frost cloth or sheets ready and water beds before a cold night, and cover or wrap young citrus, papaya, and tropical ornamentals when temperatures threaten. This is the season for strawberries in the central counties around Plant City, and an excellent time to plant bare-root and container deciduous fruit trees, blueberries, citrus, and roses while they are dormant or semi-dormant. Mulch deeply, weed in the cool weather, and start warm-season seedlings indoors or in a protected spot for the late-winter transplant rush.
Zone 10a (south-central Florida & the lower east coast): the dry-season garden thrives with little frost worry. Keep planting and harvesting tomatoes, peppers, beans, squash, and greens, sow more lettuce and herbs, and start seeds for the tropical crops that will go in as the season warms.
Zone 11a (the Florida Keys & deep south coast): essentially frost-free, the warmest gardening in the state. Grow tropical vegetables and herbs year-round, plant tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, and beans for the dry-season harvest, and water regularly through the dry months as the salt-laden trade winds dry the thin soils.
Zone 9a (north-central Florida, Gainesville & the Nature Coast): the main cool-season vegetable garden is in full production but frost is still a real risk. Keep frost cloth ready for occasional freezes, harvest broccoli, cabbage, collards, carrots, and lettuce, and protect tender citrus and tropicals on cold nights when the inland temperatures drop.
What's at the Farmers Market
January is one of the richest months at Florida markets, exactly when the rest of the country has the least — the state's winter harvest is at full flood. Citrus defines the season: navel and Valencia oranges, Indian River grapefruit, tangerines, honeybells (Minneola tangelos), and kumquats from the central and east-coast groves are at their juicy peak. Choose citrus that feels heavy for its size with firm skin; greenish or blemished patches do not affect the ripe sweetness inside.
Plant City strawberries are at their winter best, sold roadside and at the markets around Hillsborough County, and the winter vegetable fields pour out tomatoes, bell peppers, snap beans, sweet corn, cucumbers, squash, cabbage, collards, and lettuce from the southern and east-coast growing regions. Look too for cool-season broccoli, cauliflower, and root crops, central-Florida blueberries just starting in the warmest spots, and Florida honey, cane syrup, and stone-ground grits. Refrigerate berries unwashed in a single layer, keep tomatoes at room temperature, and store citrus cool for weeks of keeping.
Night Sky This Month
Florida's flat horizons and mild January nights make the dry winter one of the best stargazing stretches of the year, and the state holds two of the Southeast's darkest skies. Kissimmee Prairie Preserve State Park, north of Okeechobee, is Florida's first certified International Dark Sky Park and hosts winter star parties on its vast unlit prairie; the wide skies of Big Cypress National Preserve and the Everglades offer the other great dark-sky escape from the glow of Orlando, Tampa, and the Miami coast. From these flat sites the whole sky reaches almost to the horizon.
Overhead, the brilliant winter constellations dominate: Orion rides high in the south with the dazzling Orion Nebula glowing in his sword, his belt pointing down to Sirius, the sky's brightest star, which climbs higher here than at northern latitudes. The great Winter Hexagon sprawls around them, with the Pleiades cluster riding high. The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks in a brief, sharp burst around January 3, best after midnight from a dark prairie or Everglades site. The printable Florida night-sky guide lists this year's exact meteor-peak dates, planet positions, and the best dark-sky sites for your region.
Butterflies & Pollinators
Florida is the one place in the continental United States where January remains a genuine butterfly month, especially in the frost-free central and southern peninsula. The state butterfly, the zebra longwing, floats slowly through shaded hammock edges and gardens on warm afternoons and roosts communally at night, while the gulf fritillary flashes orange over passionflower vines and lantana. Cloudless sulphurs, white peacocks, common buckeyes, great southern whites along the coasts, and the dark palamedes and giant swallowtails all stay on the wing in the south on mild days.
This is also the heart of Florida's wintering monarch story: while migrants funnel through the Panhandle in fall, a non-migratory population breeds through the mild winter in the central and southern peninsula wherever milkweed grows, so caterpillars and fresh adults can be found in January gardens. In the southeast Florida coastal hammocks, the jewel-like atala hairstreak persists year-round where its native coontie host is planted. In the colder north and Panhandle, fewer species fly, but a warm spell still brings out sulphurs and the occasional overwintered question mark or goatweed leafwing. Leaving Spanish needles, larval host plants, and leaf litter undisturbed keeps the winter butterflies fed.
Trees This Month
January in Florida is an evergreen month — the state's signature trees hold their leaves through the mild winter while a handful of deciduous species stand bare. The live oaks, draped in Spanish moss and resurrection fern, keep their dark crowns; southern magnolia, cabbage (sabal) palm — the state tree — and the saw palmetto understory stay green; and along the south coast the dark canopies of red, black, and white mangrove hold the estuaries. The pine flatwoods and Panhandle sandhills carry their evergreen longleaf, slash, and loblolly pines.
The bare exceptions are striking. The bald cypress stands leafless and russet-brown in the swamps of Corkscrew, Big Cypress, and the blackwater rivers, its buttressed trunks and knees rising from the dark water — a deciduous conifer that drops its needles for the winter. Sweetgum, red maple, and cypress show the closest thing to fall and winter bareness the peninsula offers, while red maple is already flushing its tiny crimson flowers in the swamps and lowlands of north and central Florida, the first faint signal of an early subtropical spring. The citrus groves, by contrast, hang heavy with ripe fruit.
Go deeper with the Florida guides
The complete Florida birding, native-plant, wildflower, and night-sky guides — or the whole year in one bundle.
Same month elsewhere: January in Georgia · January in Idaho · January in Illinois