Mississippi Nature Guide: October 2026
October is the peak of the Mississippi fall — the great monarch migration funnels down the Gulf coast, the first wintering ducks return to the Delta, the northeastern hills color richly, and the markets brim with sweet potatoes, pecans, and pumpkins. It is one of the two finest months of the nature year.
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
October is a superb migration and arrival month in Mississippi, the fall flood at its height and the winter birds returning. The first big push of wintering waterfowl arrives in the Delta — Northern Pintail, Gadwall, American Wigeon, Green-winged Teal, Northern Shoveler, Ring-necked Duck, and the first Greater White-fronted Geese dropping into the flooded fields and catfish ponds along the Mississippi Flyway. The last warblers and Neotropical migrants stream through and along the coast, and sparrows arrive in force — White-throated, White-crowned, Savannah, Song, Swamp, and the secretive Le Conte's in the broomsedge.
Wintering specialties return: the first Yellow-rumped Warblers, Ruby-crowned Kinglets, Hermit Thrushes, Eastern Phoebes, and American Robins. Raptors continue south — late Broad-winged Hawks, arriving Red-tailed and Red-shouldered Hawks, and Bald Eagles returning to their winter river haunts. The last Ruby-throated Hummingbirds depart while the first wintering Rufous Hummingbirds settle at coastal feeders. On the Gulf Islands National Seashore beaches, migrating and wintering shorebirds, gulls, and the returning Brown Pelicans work the cooling Sound.
What's Blooming
October sustains Mississippi's rich fall wildflower bloom, the open country golden and purple. Goldenrod still blazes in great waves along the roadsides and old fields, joined by the season-defining asters — purple, white, and blue — blue mistflower, swamp sunflower, snakeroot, beggar-ticks, and the last blazing star and ironweed. The rare Black Belt prairie remnants close their flowering year with late asters, gentians, and grasses going to seed on the chalky soils.
In the wetlands, the brilliant gold swamp sunflower (narrowleaf sunflower) lights the ditches and marsh edges, and the last cardinal flower and lobelia finish. The drifts of scarlet red spider lily fade as the bare green strap leaves emerge to carry the bulb through winter. In gardens, the sasanqua camellias open in earnest, joined by mums, salvias, Mexican bush sage, lantana, and cosmos. The native grasses — little bluestem, broomsedge, muhly grass — flush their tawny and rosy seed-heads. The pollinator garden fuels the last of the southbound monarchs.
Garden This Month
October is the heart of the pleasant Mississippi fall garden, the cool-season crops thriving in the mild weather and the first frost approaching from the north. Keep direct-sowing the fast greens — lettuce, spinach, mustard, arugula, radishes, and turnips — and harvest the maturing broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, collards, kale, carrots, beets, and green onions as they size up, all sweetened by the cooling nights. Plant garlic, shallots, and multiplying onions now for next summer's harvest.
The first frost typically arrives in the northern hills in mid-to-late October, central Mississippi at month's end, and not until November on the coast — so harvest the last fall tomatoes, peppers, okra, and basil ahead of it, and keep row cover handy to protect tender crops and stretch the season. Pull and compost the spent summer plants, refresh the beds, and sow a cover crop of crimson clover, Austrian winter peas, or winter rye on any resting ground. Rake and compost the falling leaves, plant spring-flowering bulbs — daffodils, narcissus, and the like — and set out cool-season pansies and violas. The fall garden is the most rewarding season of the Mississippi year.
Zone 7b (northeastern hills & the north): frost approaches mid-to-late month. Harvest the warm-season crops before the first freeze, keep cold-hardy greens and root crops growing, and protect tender plants under row cover on frosty nights.
Zone 8a (central Mississippi & the Delta): the cool-season garden thrives. Keep planting greens, lettuce, radishes, and spinach, plant garlic and shallots, and harvest the fall tomatoes and peppers before the first frost, which usually comes late in the month.
Zone 9a (Gulf coast): the long, frost-free fall garden is at its best. Plant the full range of cool-season crops, set out cabbage and broccoli, and enjoy the most productive growing of the year well into winter.
What's at the Farmers Market
October markets are full of the Mississippi harvest. The Vardaman sweet potato crop is in full swing, the state's signature fall crop at its abundant best, and the pecan harvest hits its stride from the native and improved orchards. The fruit and squash tables hold the last muscadines and scuppernongs, apples, Asian pears, persimmons, pumpkins, and winter squash in every shape. The vegetable stands fill with the fall greens — collards, kale, mustard, turnip greens, lettuce, spinach — and broccoli, cabbage, turnips, beets, and the last warm-season holdovers.
Gulf shrimp run at the coastal docks, and the first cool-season oysters return from the Sound late in the month. Cut flowers, honey, mums, and farm eggs round out the markets. Choose sweet potatoes firm and unblemished and cure them before storing cool and dry, never refrigerated. Pick pecans heavy in clean shells and store shelled nuts cold. Choose pumpkins and winter squash with hard rinds and intact stems for long keeping in a cool, dry place. The markets carry the deep, generous bounty of autumn.
Night Sky This Month
October's crisp, clear nights make for excellent viewing from Mississippi's dark sites — the wide Delta, the forests of Noxubee NWR and the De Soto National Forest, Tishomingo State Park in the northeast hills, and the unlit seaward beaches of the Gulf Islands National Seashore. The cool, comfortable nights bring out the local astronomy clubs for fall star parties around Jackson and the coast.
The autumn sky rules the evening: the Great Square of Pegasus rides high overhead, the chained princess Andromeda stretches from its corner, and the W of Cassiopeia climbs in the northeast. From a dark Mississippi horizon the Andromeda Galaxy (M31) shows as a faint oval smudge to the naked eye — the most distant object visible without a telescope. The summer Milky Way still arches in the west early in the night. The Orionid meteor shower, debris of Halley's Comet, peaks in late October, best after midnight from a dark site. The printable Mississippi night-sky guide lists this year's exact meteor-peak dates, planet positions, and the best dark-sky sites for the autumn nights.
Butterflies & Pollinators
October is the peak of the monarch migration in Mississippi, the year's great butterfly spectacle. The migratory generation streams south through the state, the flights stacking up and funneling along the Gulf coast and the barrier islands of the Gulf Islands National Seashore, where waves of monarchs pause to nectar and rest before the long crossing toward the Mexican overwintering forests. Watching them drift over the coastal dunes and through the gardens is one of the great moments of the Mississippi nature year.
The cloudless sulphurs continue their strong southward flight, gulf fritillaries remain abundant, and common buckeyes are everywhere in the fall fields. The resident butterflies stay active in the mild days — eastern tiger swallowtails, painted and American ladies, red admirals, sleepy oranges, and grass skippers — and along the coast long-tailed skippers and southern strays linger. The blooming goldenrod, asters, blue mistflower, lantana, and salvias are alive with nectaring butterflies. Leaving the seed heads, host plants, and leaf litter standing now shelters the species that will overwinter as eggs, larvae, pupae, and adults.
Trees This Month
October brings Mississippi's fall color to its height, best and most reliable in the northeastern Tishomingo hill country and the higher hills. The sweetgum turns its star-shaped leaves a brilliant mix of scarlet, purple, orange, and gold, often all on one tree, and the oaks — red, scarlet, and Shumard — flush deep red and russet. The hickories and tulip trees glow yellow and gold, the maples turn orange and red, the dogwoods deepen to maroon, and the early-turned blackgum (tupelo) and sumac blaze scarlet.
In the Delta swamps the bald cypress turns its feathery foliage a glowing russet-orange, reflected in the dark water before needle-drop — one of the signature autumn sights of the lowlands. The mast harvest finishes as the last acorns, hickory nuts, and pecans fall, and the persimmons hang ripe and sweet after the frost. Along the Gulf coast the evergreen live oaks, magnolias, and pines hold their green while the hardwoods turn. The forest puts on its richest show of the year before the leaves come down.
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: October in Missouri · October in Montana · October in Nebraska