Massachusetts Nature Guide: October 2026
October is peak fall in Massachusetts — the Berkshires blaze with maple-and-oak color, the cranberry bogs of the southeast are flooded for harvest, sparrows and sea ducks pour through, and the orchards overflow with apples and cider.
What to look for this week
- Feeders are at their winter peak across Massachusetts — chickadees, titmice, juncos, and cardinals work the seed as Christmas Bird Count circles wrap up statewide.
- The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks in a short, sharp burst around January 3 — watch the northeast after midnight from a dark inland site like the Quabbin or the Berkshires.
- A planning week: review last season and order seeds early, before popular short-season varieties for New England's narrow window sell out.
Birds This Month
October is a rich migration month in Massachusetts as the season shifts from songbirds to waterfowl and winter visitors. Sparrow migration peaks, with White-throated, White-crowned, Song, Savannah, Fox, and Swamp Sparrows, Dark-eyed Juncos, and Eastern Towhees filling the hedgerows and brushy fields, alongside the last Yellow-rumped Warblers, kinglets, and Hermit Thrushes. Blackbird and American Robin flocks swell, and Common Loons and grebes move onto the reservoirs.
On the coast, the famous fall sites — Plum Island and Race Point in Provincetown — are at their best, with seabird flights, late shorebirds, and the chance of vagrants after a front. The first wintering sea ducks return to Cape Ann and the bays: scoters, Common Eider, Long-tailed Ducks, and Harlequin Ducks. Snow Geese and dabbling ducks build at Plum Island, and the first Snowy Owl of the season could appear late in the month in an irruption year. Watch for late hawks — Red-tailed and Red-shouldered Hawks and Northern Harriers — over the marshes.
What's Blooming
October is the closing of the Massachusetts wildflower year, and most blooms are now the last hardy holdouts of fall. The late asters persist into early October — purple New England aster, blue, and white species still drawing the last bees — along with lingering goldenrod on the coast and in sheltered fields, and the odd black-eyed Susan or chicory hanging on. Witch hazel is the season's surprise: this native shrub opens its spidery yellow flowers as the leaves fall, the last native bloom of the year.
On the coast, the dunes still show seaside goldenrod and the scarlet hips of beach rose, and the salt marshes glow with the gold and russet of dying cordgrass. The native cranberry in the southeastern bogs is at full ripe red for the harvest. The fields are mostly gone to seed now — the fluffy heads of asters and goldenrod, the silk of milkweed pods bursting open — feeding the winter birds. Gardens hold on with chrysanthemums, asters, and sedum until the killing frost.
Garden This Month
October is harvest's end and garden bed-down time in Massachusetts. The first killing frost arrives through the month — earlier in the Berkshires, later on the coast — so harvest the last tomatoes, peppers, squash, and beans before it hits, and bring in the storage crops: winter squash, pumpkins, potatoes, onions, carrots, beets, and cabbage. Cool-season greens — kale, spinach, lettuce, and collards — sweeten with light frost and keep producing, especially under cover.
This is the key month to plant garlic and finish planting spring-flowering bulbs before the ground freezes. Plant trees and shrubs while the soil is still warm, mulch perennials and strawberries after the ground cools, and rake and compost leaves (or shred them for mulch). Sow or let cover crops establish on cleared beds, drain and store hoses, and clean and oil tools before storage. Cut back diseased foliage but leave seed heads and native stems standing for the birds and overwintering insects where you can.
Zone 5b (Berkshires & western hills): the killing frost has usually arrived — finish harvesting and clearing tender crops, mulch perennials and garlic for the hard winter, drain hoses, and put the garden fully to bed before the snow.
Zone 6a (central Massachusetts): first frost lands early in the month — harvest the last tomatoes and tender crops, plant garlic and the last bulbs, sow cover crops, and begin the fall cleanup as the cool-season greens keep producing.
Zone 7a (Cape Cod & the Islands): the warm coast often stays frost-free past mid-month — keep harvesting fall greens and root crops, plant garlic and bulbs, and enjoy the longest fall garden in the state.
What's at the Farmers Market
October is the great fall-harvest market month in Massachusetts. Apples are at their absolute peak, with dozens of varieties from the state's orchards, alongside fresh cider, and the signature southeastern cranberries, now harvested from the flooded bogs. Pumpkins and winter squash of every kind pile high, joined by potatoes, onions, carrots, beets, turnips, parsnips, cabbage, Brussels sprouts, broccoli, cauliflower, and hardy greens.
The last summer crops — a few late tomatoes and peppers — linger early in the month before frost, and pears and grapes round out the fruit. Eggs, honey, cheese, and bread fill the stands. Choose firm, heavy apples and store them cold, away from other produce; pick deep-red, firm cranberries that bounce, and refrigerate or freeze them, as they keep for weeks. Cure winter squash and pumpkins in a warm spot, then store cool and dry. October markets and farm stands, often paired with pick-your-own and fall festivals, are a New England highlight.
Night Sky This Month
October brings long, crisp, increasingly dark nights to Massachusetts, with the autumn sky overhead and the brilliant winter stars returning to the east. The Great Square of Pegasus rides high, and the chain of Andromeda leads to the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), an easy binocular target on a clear, moonless night from a dark site like the Berkshires or the Quabbin. The Summer Triangle still hangs in the west, while Capella, the Pleiades, and Taurus climb the eastern sky in the evening.
The Orionid meteor shower peaks in late October, around the 21st — debris from Halley's Comet, producing a modest 15 to 20 swift meteors an hour from a dark site, best after midnight as Orion rises in the southeast. The cool, dry autumn air makes for steady, transparent viewing, and the longer nights mean you no longer have to stay up late to enjoy a dark sky. For this year's exact Orionid peak date and planet positions over Massachusetts, see the printable Massachusetts night-sky guide.
Butterflies & Pollinators
October is the end of the Massachusetts butterfly season, with activity fading as the frosts arrive. The last monarchs straggle south along the coast early in the month, the final wave of the migration leaving the dunes of Cape Cod and the Islands, fueling up on the last seaside goldenrod and asters before crossing toward Mexico. Watching a late October monarch press south against the cold is a poignant close to the migration.
On warm, sunny afternoons before the killing frost, a few hardy species still fly: orange and clouded sulphurs over fields, the migratory painted and American ladies, red admirals, common buckeyes on the coast, and cabbage whites. The mourning cloaks, eastern commas, and question marks that overwinter as adults are now seeking out sheltered crevices and woodpiles to hibernate. Once the hard frosts settle in, the flying season ends for the year, and the butterflies that remain do so hidden away as eggs, larvae, pupae, or sleeping adults until spring.
Trees This Month
October is the height of fall foliage in Massachusetts, one of the most famous autumn displays in the world. The color sweeps from the western Berkshires and the hill towns — which peak in the first half of the month — eastward and toward the coast through late October. Sugar maples blaze orange, scarlet, and gold; red maples flame deep crimson; birches, aspens, hickories, and beech turn brilliant yellow; and the oaks finish the show in russet, bronze, and deep red.
The scenic Mohawk Trail, the Berkshire hills, and the central uplands draw leaf-peepers at their peak. As the color passes, the leaves fall, carpeting the forest floor and opening the canopy again. The oaks hold their leaves longest, often into winter. On the coast, the pitch pines and scrub oaks of the Cape add muted bronze tones, and the salt marshes turn gold. By month's end the western hills are bare while the coast still shows color — a fortnight-long wave of the state's most celebrated natural spectacle.
Go deeper with the Massachusetts guides
The complete Massachusetts birding, native-plant, wildflower, and night-sky guides — or the whole year in one bundle.
Same month elsewhere: October in Michigan · October in Minnesota · October in Mississippi