New Hampshire Nature Guide: January 2026
January is deep winter in New Hampshire — short days, hard cold, and deep snow in the mountains, with the Seacoast holding the milder edge of the state. The natural drama moves to the coast, the open water, and the feeder, while the high country settles into a white, silent calm.
What to look for this week
- Feeders are at their winter peak — black-capped chickadees, nuthatches, and cardinals work the seed, with purple finches, redpolls, and siskins possible in a northern-finch irruption year.
- The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks in a short, sharp burst around January 3; watch the northeast after midnight from a dark White Mountains site.
- A planning week — order seeds early, especially the short-season varieties North Country and high-elevation gardens depend on, before they sell out.
Birds This Month
January birding in New Hampshire centers on the coast and the feeder. The short Seacoast from Hampton to Rye and the Isles of Shoals hosts wintering sea ducks — common eider, long-tailed duck, all three scoters, harlequin ducks on the rocks at Rye, and rafts of common and red-throated loons. Snowy owls hunt the dunes and Hampton marshes in irruption years, and purple sandpipers work the surf-washed ledges.
Inland, feeders draw black-capped chickadees, tufted titmice, white-breasted and red-breasted nuthatches, downy and hairy woodpeckers, and northern cardinals, with the state bird, the purple finch, joining in many winters. Watch for an irruption of northern finches — common redpolls, pine siskins, evening grosbeaks, and crossbills — pushing south from the boreal forest. Bald eagles gather on open water below dams and on the Great Bay and Connecticut River.
What's Blooming
There are no wildflowers blooming in New Hampshire in January — the ground lies frozen and snow-covered from the Seacoast to the summits. The botanical interest now is in structure and persistence: the dried seed heads of New England aster, goldenrod, Joe-Pye weed, and milkweed stand above the snow, feeding finches and sparrows and catching the low winter light.
In the woods, the evergreen leaves of partridgeberry, wintergreen, and the leathery fronds of Christmas fern stay green beneath the snowpack, and the rosettes of next year's plants wait at ground level. On warm windowsills and in greenhouses, gardeners coax amaryllis and forced paperwhites into bloom, and the first seed and plant catalogs arrive to plan the year ahead. The true wildflower season is still four months off.
Garden This Month
January is the planning month for New Hampshire gardeners, with the ground frozen statewide. The most useful work is at the desk: order seeds early — especially the short-season varieties the North Country and high country depend on — sketch next year's beds, and start a sowing calendar counting back from your last frost, which ranges from late May on the Seacoast to mid-June in the mountains.
Outdoors, let snow stay banked over perennial beds and strawberries as insulation, and gently knock heavy, wet snow off arborvitae, yews, and evergreen shrubs to prevent the branch-splaying breakage that a January snow load brings. On a mild day you can prune dormant apple and pear trees and grapes. Check stored dahlia tubers and geraniums for rot, refill bird feeders, and keep heated birdbaths clean. Houseplants need the least water of the year in the dim, dry indoor air.
Zone 4a (North Country & higher elevations): the coldest gardens in the state sit deep in dormancy under heavy snow. Trust the snowpack as insulation over perennials, keep heavy snow knocked off evergreens and shrubs, and use this short-season region's longest planning window to order frost-tolerant, quick-maturing varieties early.
Zone 5b (much of the interior & lakes region): the ground is frozen and beds are dormant. Check that mulch and snow cover protect perennials and strawberries, brush snow off arborvitae and yews, and spend the month planning and ordering seeds for the season ahead.
Zone 6a (Seacoast & lower Merrimack Valley): the mildest corner of the state still freezes hard but holds less snow. Watch for freeze-thaw heaving of fall plantings, keep beds mulched, and on a thawed day prune dormant fruit trees and grapes.
What's at the Farmers Market
January markets in New Hampshire are the realm of winter farmers markets and farm stores, stocked with what stores and grows in the cold. Look for hardy storage vegetables — potatoes, carrots, beets, parsnips, turnips, rutabaga, winter squash, cabbage, onions, and garlic — alongside cold-frame and greenhouse spinach, kale, and microgreens from a few year-round growers.
This is prime season for New Hampshire's value-added farm goods: maple syrup from last spring's sugaring, raw honey, farmstead cheeses, cider and apples from controlled storage, eggs, and grass-fed and pasture-raised meats. Choose storage roots that are firm and heavy with no soft spots, and keep them cold and humid in the crisper or a cool cellar; cured winter squash and onions keep best in a cool, dry room instead. The lean months reward whatever a farmer kept well from fall.
Night Sky This Month
January offers New Hampshire's longest, darkest, and often clearest nights of the year, and the cold, dry air sharpens the stars to pinpoints. Orion dominates the southern sky, his belt pointing down-left to brilliant Sirius, the sky's brightest star, low in the southeast, and up-right to orange Aldebaran and the Pleiades star cluster. The whole Winter Hexagon — Sirius, Procyon, Pollux, Capella, Aldebaran, and Rigel — sprawls overhead.
The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks in a short, sharp burst in the first days of January; its high northern radiant rises in the northeast after midnight, making New Hampshire's latitude well placed for it on a clear, cold night. The faint winter Milky Way arches overhead through Cassiopeia and Auriga, best from the dark skies of the White Mountains and North Country. The printable New Hampshire night-sky guide lists this year's exact meteor-peak dates and planet positions.
Butterflies & Pollinators
No butterflies fly in New Hampshire in January — the cold and snow keep every species locked in its overwintering stage. They are present, though, hidden in plain sight. The mourning cloak and the eastern comma and gray comma overwinter as adults, tucked behind loose bark and in woodpiles and crevices, their antifreeze-laced bodies waiting to fly on the first warm day of spring.
Most other species pass the winter as eggs or chrysalises frozen in the leaf litter and on host plants: monarchs have long since left for Mexico, while the next generation of swallowtails and fritillaries waits as pupae or tiny caterpillars. The woolly bear caterpillars of the Isabella tiger moth are frozen solid under leaves, to thaw and resume in spring. January is a month to plan a butterfly garden — sketch where native milkweed and nectar plants will go when the ground thaws.
Trees This Month
January is when New Hampshire's evergreens earn their keep. The eastern white pine — the state's great soft-needled pine — red spruce, balsam fir, and eastern hemlock hold their green against the snow, with spruce and fir forming the dark forests of the mountains and North Country. The white-barked trunks of white birch, the state tree, glow against the snow, and the coppery clinging leaves of young American beech rustle in the wind.
The hardwoods stand bare and dormant — sugar maple, red maple, yellow birch, red oak, and white ash — but their winter silhouettes and bark are identifiable: the shaggy curls of shagbark hickory, the platy bark of red oak, and the smooth gray of beech. Snow load is the season's hazard; heavy, wet snow and ice storms can split crowns and bend birches to the ground. The trees rest now, their buds set since fall and sealed against the cold, waiting for the lengthening light.
Go deeper with the New Hampshire guides
The complete New Hampshire birding, native-plant, wildflower, and night-sky guides — or the whole year in one bundle.
Same month elsewhere: January in New Jersey · January in New Mexico · January in New York