Georgia Nature Guide: May 2026
May is high spring in Georgia — Painted Buntings sing on the coast, mountain flame azaleas and southern magnolias bloom, and the first Georgia peaches and Vidalia onions flood the markets. Breeding birds are in full song from the savanna to the summit.
What to look for this week
- Christmas Bird Counts wrap up across Georgia as wintering waterfowl crowd the coastal impoundments at Harris Neck and the Altamaha, and rafts of ducks fill the Piedmont reservoirs.
- The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks in a short, sharp burst around January 3 — best after midnight from a dark north Georgia mountain ridge or the unlit Okefenokee.
- Cold frames and row covers keep collards and kale growing on the Coastal Plain, while mountain gardeners order short-season seed before favorites sell out.
Birds This Month
May is peak breeding season and the tail of migration in Georgia. The last passage migrants stream through in the first half of the month — Blackpoll, Bay-breasted, Cape May, and Magnolia Warblers and the latest flycatchers — while the resident breeders are in full song. On the coast, the brilliant Painted Bunting sings from the live-oak hammocks of Jekyll, St. Simons, and Cumberland Islands, one of the great prizes of a Georgia spring, alongside breeding Wilson's Plovers, terns, Black Skimmers, and the Wood Stork rookeries.
Inland, the woods ring with Wood Thrush, Scarlet and Summer Tanagers, Hooded and Kentucky Warblers, Yellow-billed Cuckoos, Great Crested Flycatchers, Indigo and Blue Grosbeaks, and the Brown Thrasher (the state bird). The Swallow-tailed Kites hunt over the southern swamps, the longleaf Red-cockaded Woodpeckers and Bachman's Sparrows are feeding young, and in the high north Georgia mountains the cool-forest breeders sing — Black-throated Blue, Canada, and Blackburnian Warblers, Veery, and Rose-breasted Grosbeak on the slopes around Brasstown Bald. Ruby-throated Hummingbirds are nesting statewide.
What's Blooming
May carries Georgia's wildflower season into early summer, the show shifting from the lowlands up into the mountains. In the north Georgia high country the flame azalea blazes orange across the open woods and slopes around Brasstown Bald and the Cohuttas, joined by mountain laurel, Catawba and rosebay rhododendron, and galax in the rich coves. The state flower Cherokee rose continues its white bloom on fence rows and thickets across the Piedmont and Coastal Plain.
In the Piedmont and Coastal Plain the summer wildflowers begin — coreopsis, black-eyed Susan, butterfly weed, the first coneflowers, spiderwort, fleabane, yarrow, and drifts of oxeye daisy color the roadsides and old fields. In the longleaf flatwoods the pitcher plants, meadow beauty, colicroot, and yellow star-grass bloom, and along stream banks the atamasco lilies finish. The native swamp and sweetshrub scent the woods, and gardens fill with gardenias, hydrangeas, daylilies, irises, and the first roses in full flush statewide.
Garden This Month
May is the warm-season garden in full swing across most of Georgia, and the first big harvests arrive. In the Piedmont and Coastal Plain, pick squash, zucchini, cucumbers, the first tomatoes and green beans, and the last spring greens, peas, and strawberries before the heat ends them. Keep planting heat-lovers — okra, southern (field) peas, sweet potato slips, peppers, eggplant, and successions of beans and corn — and set out basil and other warm-season herbs.
Mulch beds heavily to hold moisture and cool the soil as summer heat builds, and begin steady deep watering, especially for newly set transplants. Watch closely for the season's pests — squash bugs, vine borers, hornworms, stink bugs, and Japanese beetles — and stake or cage tomatoes before they sprawl. In the north Georgia mountains the frost-free date arrives mid-month at last, so finally set out tomatoes, peppers, squash, beans, and warm-season annuals. Statewide, deadhead spring annuals, feed heavy producers, and keep the harvest picked to keep the plants productive through the long Georgia summer.
Zone 6b (north Georgia mountains): the frost-free date finally arrives mid-month. Set out tomatoes, peppers, squash, beans, and cucumbers once the danger passes, transplant warm-season annuals, and keep the cool-season greens going while they last.
Zone 8a (lower Piedmont & Fall Line): the warm-season garden is in full production. Harvest squash, cucumbers, and the first tomatoes, plant heat-loving okra, southern peas, and sweet potato slips, and succession-sow beans and corn.
Zone 8b (Coastal Plain & coast): summer heat sets in. Plant okra, southern peas, sweet potatoes, and heat-tolerant greens, mulch heavily against the heat, and begin steady watering as the cool-season crops bolt and finish.
What's at the Farmers Market
May is when Georgia's signature crops crowd the markets. The first Georgia peaches arrive from the central Fall Line orchards around Fort Valley and Byron — the state's most famous fruit, fragrant and tree-ripe. Vidalia sweet onions are at their peak from the sandy soils around Vidalia, and the first Georgia blueberries, now the state's top fruit by value, ripen across the south-central Coastal Plain. Strawberries finish strong, and the first sweet corn, new potatoes, and Vidalia spring onions fill the stands.
The spring vegetables are abundant — squash, zucchini, cucumbers, snap beans, English peas, lettuce, beets, carrots, cabbage, broccoli, and bunched greens, with the first tomatoes appearing late in the month. Choose peaches that give slightly at the seam and smell sweet, ripening firm ones on the counter; store Vidalias cool, dry, and separated since their sugar makes them spoil fast; and pick blueberries with an intact silvery bloom and refrigerate them unwashed. Buy sweet corn the day you'll eat it, keep it in the husk and cold, and eat strawberries within a day or two. Georgia's market abundance has arrived.
Night Sky This Month
May's warm, comfortable nights invite stargazing as the spring sky gives way to summer. Georgia's dark-sky destinations are at their pleasant best — the north Georgia mountains around Brasstown Bald and Black Rock Mountain State Park, the deep-swamp darkness of Stephen C. Foster State Park in the Okefenokee, and the unlit beaches of Cumberland and Jekyll Islands. The Charlie Elliott Wildlife Center southeast of Atlanta hosts the astronomy club's observing program at its observatory, a fine accessible dark site.
The full spring sky stands on display: Leo and Virgo ride high in the south, the Big Dipper's handle arcs to orange Arcturus in Boötes and on to blue-white Spica, and the keystone of Hercules rises in the east, carrying the great globular cluster M13 for telescopes. Late in the night the summer Milky Way and the bright stars of the Summer Triangle begin to climb the eastern sky. The minor Eta Aquariid meteor shower, debris of Halley's Comet, peaks in early May, favoring the pre-dawn hours. The printable Georgia night-sky guide lists this year's planet positions and best regional dark-sky sites.
Butterflies & Pollinators
May is a peak butterfly month across Georgia, with diversity high from the coast to the mountains. The swallowtails are abundant — eastern tiger (the state butterfly), zebra, spicebush, black, pipevine, and the coastal palamedes swallowtails nectar at gardens, blackberry, and milkweed. The summer brood of gulf fritillaries builds on the passionflower vines, great spangled and variegated fritillaries fly in the meadows, and red-spotted purples, red admirals, common buckeyes, American and painted ladies, and question marks are all on the wing.
The monarch is now resident and breeding, its caterpillars feeding on milkweed across the state. Whites and sulphurs — cabbage white, cloudless sulphur, sleepy orange, little yellow, and orange sulphur — brighten the open ground, and the skippers multiply: silver-spotted, fiery, sachem, zabulon, and clouded skippers dart at the flowers. In the north Georgia mountains the spring-woods specialties and the first great spangled fritillaries emerge as the season climbs. A garden of milkweed, native blooms, and host plants is alive with butterflies on every warm afternoon.
Trees This Month
May fills Georgia's forests with deep, full summer leaf and brings the big southern flowering trees into bloom. The southern magnolia opens its huge fragrant creamy-white flowers across the Coastal Plain and Piedmont, the very emblem of the Deep South, joined by the white-blossomed sweetbay magnolia in the wet bottoms. The tulip tree lifts its orange-cupped flowers high in the canopy, and the black locust, fringetree, sourwood, and chinaberry add their bloom.
In the high north Georgia mountains the flowering shrubs peak: flame azalea blazes orange, mountain laurel whitens the slopes, and rosebay and Catawba rhododendron begin in the coves and along the streams. Along the coast the evergreen live oak (the state tree) stands in full leaf draped in Spanish moss, and the cabbage palmetto and wax myrtle green the maritime forest. The pines finish their pollen and stand in fresh growth, the bald cypress is fully feathered across the Okefenokee, and the oaks and hickories have closed the canopy for the season. Summer has settled over the Georgia woods.
Go deeper with the Georgia guides
The complete Georgia birding, native-plant, wildflower, and night-sky guides — or the whole year in one bundle.
Same month elsewhere: May in Idaho · May in Illinois · May in Indiana