Birch Compass

January 2026 — Vermont Nature Journal

What to look for this month near you, with room to record what you find.

This month in nature

Birds to watch

  • American Crow Corvus brachyrhynchos
  • Black-capped Chickadee Poecile atricapillus
  • Blue Jay Cyanocitta cristata
  • American Goldfinch Spinus tristis
  • Mourning Dove Zenaida macroura
  • European Starling Sturnus vulgaris

In bloom

A quiet month here — watch and note what you find.

In the garden

  • A planning week — order seeds early, especially the short-season varieties Northeast Kingdom gardens depend on, before they sell out.
  • Leave snow banked over perennial beds as insulation, and gently knock heavy wet snow off arborvitae and evergreens to prevent breakage.
  • On a calm, mild day, prune apple and other fruit trees while they're fully dormant and disease pressure is at its lowest.
  • Set up the grow-light shelf and start the slowest seedlings — onions, leeks, and celery — for transplants you'll set out in late May.

Night sky

  • The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks in a short, sharp burst around January 3; watch the northeast after midnight from a dark Vermont ridge away from town lights.
  • Orion dominates the southern sky, his belt pointing down to brilliant Sirius — the cold, dry air over the snow makes for crystal-clear viewing.
  • On the coldest, clearest nights, scan the northern horizon for the aurora borealis, which Vermont's latitude catches more often than most of the Lower 48.
My field notes