New Hampshire Nature Guide: June 2026
June is early summer's lush green peak in New Hampshire — the breeding birds are in full song, mountain laurel and the famed alpine wildflowers of Mount Washington bloom, strawberries ripen, and the longest days of the year stretch the light past nine o'clock. The whole state is at its leafy, fragrant best.
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
June is the height of the breeding season, and the New Hampshire woods ring with song from before dawn. The warblers that passed through in May are now nesting where they belong: black-throated blue, black-throated green, blackburnian, Canada, and magnolia warblers sing in the northern hardwoods and spruce-fir, while ovenbirds, veeries, hermit thrushes, and wood thrushes fill the forest with flute-like song.
This is the prime month to seek the high-mountain specialty: the Bicknell's Thrush sings at dawn and dusk in the stunted krummholz near treeline on Mount Washington and the Presidentials, alongside blackpoll warblers and white-throated sparrows at high elevation. Common loons tend chicks on the lakes, peregrine falcons raise young on cliffs, bobolinks bubble over the hayfields, and ruby-throated hummingbirds work the bee balm. Common nighthawks and whip-poor-wills call at dusk, and fledglings begin to appear at feeders.
What's Blooming
June brings New Hampshire's most extraordinary wildflower event: the alpine bloom above treeline. On the exposed fellfields and ridges of the Presidential Range, arctic-alpine relics flower in early to mid-June — white-cushioned diapensia, the magenta Lapland rosebay, pink alpine azalea, moss campion, and mountain cranberry — a tundra garden found nowhere else in the Northeast. Lower down, the pink lady's slipper orchid peaks in the acid woods, and mountain laurel opens its pink-and-white cups along rocky slopes.
In the lowlands, summer wildflowers take over: blue flag iris and buttercups in wet meadows, daisies, red and white clover, lupine coloring fields and roadsides (famous in nearby valleys), blue-eyed grass, and the first milkweed coming into fragrant bloom. Wild rose and elderflower scent the hedgerows. Gardens overflow with peonies, roses, and bearded iris. June is the lush green peak of the wildflower year, layered from the seacoast meadows to the alpine summits.
Garden This Month
June is when the New Hampshire garden hits full stride, with frost danger past statewide by early in the month. Finish setting out any remaining warm-season transplants — tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, squash, cucumbers, melons, and basil — and direct-sow beans, corn, and a second round of lettuce, beets, carrots, and dill for succession. Pinch and stake tomatoes, mulch beds to lock in moisture, and side-dress heavy feeders with compost.
Harvest is beginning: spinach, lettuce, peas, radishes, scallions, the first strawberries, and early summer squash. Stay ahead of weeds while they're small, and watch for the season's first pests — Colorado potato beetle, cabbage worms, cucumber beetles. Keep newly set transplants and seedlings well watered through any early-summer dry spell. In the flower garden, deadhead spent bulbs, stake peonies, and plant out warm-season annuals. The longest days give plants and gardeners their fullest working light of the year.
Zone 3b (high mountains & coldest north): frost risk only just ends here in early June, so this is the planting month. Set out tomatoes, peppers, squash, and cucumbers once frost passes, direct-sow beans and the fast brassicas, and choose your shortest-season varieties to beat the early-fall frost.
Zone 4a (North Country & high valleys): the last frost often lingers into early June. Set out warm-season transplants now and direct-sow beans, corn, and squash, keeping row cover ready for a late cold night. Cool-season crops are growing strong.
Zone 5b (interior & lakes region): frost is past and the garden is in full growth. Finish planting warm-season crops early in the month, succession-sow beans, lettuce, and beets, and begin steady harvests of spring greens, peas, and the first summer squash.
What's at the Farmers Market
June markets in New Hampshire explode with early-summer abundance. The headline is local strawberries — ripe, fragrant, and fleeting, sold both at markets and at pick-your-own farms — joined by the last of the asparagus and rhubarb. The first summer crops arrive: peas, lettuce, spinach, salad greens, radishes, scallions, beet greens, kohlrabi, and early summer squash and zucchini, plus garlic scapes and the first new potatoes.
The stands are full of greenhouse tomatoes, herbs, and cut flowers, with raw honey, maple syrup, cheeses, eggs, and pasture-raised meats. Choose strawberries that are fully red and fragrant — they won't sweeten after picking — and refrigerate them dry and unwashed, using within a day or two. Pick crisp, heavy greens and pencil-thin asparagus while it lasts. Garlic scapes should be tender and curled. The markets are at their freshest and most colorful as the full summer harvest gathers momentum.
Night Sky This Month
June holds the shortest nights of the year around the summer solstice, so true darkness is brief and late — but the summer sky is rising. The Summer Triangle of Vega, Deneb, and Altair climbs the eastern sky after dark, and the Keystone of Hercules with its globular cluster M13 stands high overhead. Orange Arcturus and the curving handle of the Big Dipper dominate the west, and ruddy Antares in Scorpius glows low in the south.
There is no major meteor shower in June, and the short nights make it a month for early targets and bright objects rather than faint deep-sky hunting. As midnight passes, the heart of the summer Milky Way rises through Sagittarius and Scorpius in the south, its richest star clouds best from the dark skies of the White Mountains and North Country. Long June twilights can also bring rare noctilucent clouds glowing in the late-night north. The printable New Hampshire night-sky guide lists this year's planet positions and the best dark windows.
Butterflies & Pollinators
June is a fine butterfly month across New Hampshire as the summer broods build. The big swallowtails are at their best: the yellow-and-black eastern tiger swallowtail and the northern Canadian tiger swallowtail sail along edges and nectar at milkweed, while black swallowtails patrol gardens. In the White Mountains and North Country, the dark, white-banded white admiral appears, puddling on damp dirt roads, and the first Atlantis fritillaries fly in mountain meadows.
The monarchs that arrived in spring are now laying eggs and producing the first home-grown generation on milkweed. Meadows and roadsides fill with great spangled fritillaries, pearl crescents, silver-spotted skippers, clouded and orange sulphurs, cabbage whites, and a variety of small skippers. The blooming common milkweed becomes a butterfly magnet on warm afternoons. June's long, warm days and abundant flowers make it one of the most rewarding months to watch butterflies, from seacoast meadows to mountain clearings.
Trees This Month
June finds New Hampshire's forests in full, deep summer leaf, the canopy closed and shading the woodland floor. The flowering shifts to the later trees and shrubs: black locust drips white fragrant clusters, basswood (linden) will follow, catalpa blooms in the south, and the white plates of elderberry and viburnum open along edges. Mountain laurel covers rocky slopes in pink and white.
The conifers complete their flush of new growth: white pine finishes its candles and sheds clouds of yellow pollen that film ponds and cars, while red spruce and balsam fir push soft new needles in the high country. The high mountains, last to leaf out, finally green up, and the krummholz near treeline forms its dense stunted mat. Oaks, maples, birches, and beech are all in full foliage, setting the seeds and samaras that ripen by fall. The forest is at its lushest and most uniform green of the entire year.
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: June in New Jersey · June in New Mexico · June in New York