Utah Nature Guide: February 2026
February still holds Utah in winter's grip, but the light lengthens and the first stirrings begin — great horned owls are on eggs, sage-grouse start gathering near their leks, and the St. George desert greens weeks ahead of the snow-bound north. The Wasatch snowpack peaks even as the lower benches begin to thaw on sunny afternoons.
What to look for this week
- Rosy-finches swarm the feeders at Alta and Brighton as deep snow drives black, gray-crowned, and brown-capped flocks down from the Wasatch alpine.
- The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks in a short sharp burst around January 3; chase a clear window over a dark red-rock horizon away from the valley inversions.
- Bald eagles concentrate along the open lower Bear River and at Farmington Bay, hunting the wintering waterfowl on the Great Salt Lake marshes.
- Utah's winter indoor markets lean on storage onions, potatoes, and squash, with jars of local sagebrush and alfalfa honey from the Beehive State.
Birds This Month
February still rewards Utah's winter birders while hinting at spring. Rosy-finches still swarm the Wasatch canyon feeders at Alta, Brighton, and Snowbasin, and bald eagles remain concentrated along the open rivers and at Farmington Bay, often at their peak numbers early in the month. On the Great Salt Lake, wintering common goldeneye, tundra swans, and diving ducks linger while the first migrant flocks stir.
The month's signature event begins on the sagebrush steppe: Greater Sage-Grouse males start gathering at traditional leks on the West Desert, in Rich County, and on the high sage flats, beginning their strutting displays before dawn. Great horned owls are already incubating eggs in cottonwood snags and old hawk nests across the foothills, hooting through the cold nights. Backyard feeders still draw Cassin's finches, house finches, juncos, and Townsend's solitaires, and listen for the first black-capped chickadee spring song on warm afternoons.
What's Blooming
February's bloom belongs almost entirely to Utah's warm southwest. Around St. George and the Beaver Dam Wash, the Mojave-edge desert begins to wake: early desert annuals push up, and the first almond and flowering quince open in Dixie gardens while the rest of the state is still frozen. In the lowest washes, watch for the earliest desert wildflowers responding to winter rains.
On the Wasatch Front, the signs are subtler. Snowdrops, winter aconite, and crocus push through thawing soil and lingering snow in sheltered city gardens toward month's end, and pussy willow catkins fatten and silver along canyon creeks. The red stems of red-osier dogwood brighten, and the buds of foothill maples and Gambel oak begin, almost imperceptibly, to swell. In the high mountains and Uinta Basin, deep snow keeps everything dormant well into spring.
Garden This Month
February is when Utah gardeners shift from rest to preparation, with timing that swings wildly by elevation. On the Wasatch Front, finish dormant pruning of apples, pears, grapes, currants, and raspberries before the buds swell, and apply dormant oil on a calm, above-freezing day to manage overwintering pests on fruit trees. Start onions, leeks, and slow-germinating flowers under lights now for the long lead time these crops need.
As the lower benches thaw on sunny afternoons, top-dress beds with compost and aged manure, but stay off wet, heavy soil to avoid compaction. Late in the month, the first peas, spinach, and radishes can go into a cold frame or under cloche on the warmest sites. In St. George the spring garden is already running hard; in the high Uinta Basin and mountain valleys, the ground stays frozen and the work is still indoor seed-starting and planning. Watch the soil, not the calendar — Utah's freeze-thaw cycle, not the date, sets the pace.
Zone 5b (Wasatch Front benches): finish dormant pruning of apples, pears, and grapes before bud-break, and start onions, leeks, and slow flowers under lights indoors. On a thaw, top-dress beds with compost; keep garlic mulched against freeze-thaw heaving.
Zone 6b (warmer valley floors & lower benches): start peppers, onions, and early brassicas indoors, and sow spinach, peas, and radishes under cloche or in cold frames late in the month as the soil works.
Zone 8a (St. George): Utah's earliest garden is in full swing — direct-sow peas, carrots, beets, lettuce, and potatoes, set out cool-season transplants, and finish pruning peaches and grapes before the fast desert spring.
What's at the Farmers Market
February markets in Utah remain pantry-and-storage affairs while the fields stay frozen. The indoor winter farmers markets on the Wasatch Front — in Salt Lake City, Ogden, and Provo — keep stocking the state's keeping crops: storage onions, potatoes, carrots, beets, winter squash, and cold-stored cabbage from the irrigated valleys, alongside cellar-cured garlic and dried beans.
Local honey from Utah's many valley apiaries remains a centerpiece, as do last fall's storage apples from Wasatch Front and Box Elder County orchards, still crisp from cold storage. Look also for greenhouse microgreens and salad greens, free-range eggs, grass-fed and pasture-raised meats, milled local grains, and home-preserved goods. Maple producers in the Wasatch and Bear River ranges may tap box elder and bigtooth maple late in the month if a warm spell follows hard frost, offering a small run of Utah mountain syrup.
Night Sky This Month
February offers some of Utah's clearest, steadiest skies of the year, and the state's unmatched roster of Dark Sky places makes the most of them. The red-rock parks — Bryce Canyon, Capitol Reef, Canyonlands, Arches, and Natural Bridges — hold crisp winter darkness, while Antelope Island State Park and East Canyon State Park give Wasatch Front observers an escape above the valley inversions that often trap haze in the lowlands. Bryce's high, dry rim is famously transparent on a cold clear night.
The brilliant winter constellations still rule: Orion stands due south after dark, with Taurus, the Pleiades, Gemini, and the dog stars Sirius and Procyon framing him, and Leo rising in the east as a herald of spring. The faint winter Milky Way arches overhead through Auriga. No major meteor shower peaks this month, making February ideal for deep-sky and telescope viewing of the Orion Nebula; the printable Utah night-sky guide lists this year's planet positions and best dark-sky dates.
Butterflies & Pollinators
February stirs Utah's earliest butterflies in the warmest corners. In the St. George desert, mild afternoons can rouse painted ladies, orange sulphurs, and the small Sara orangetip beginning to emerge along desert washes, and an overwintering mourning cloak may glide the lower canyons. On the Wasatch Front, the mourning cloak remains the most likely sighting — these long-lived adults hibernate under cottonwood bark and in woodpiles and fly on the first sunny, above-50°F afternoons in the foothills.
Across the snow-covered high country and the cold Great Basin valleys, butterflies stay dormant as eggs, chrysalids, and hibernating adults. This is the season to plan a pollinator garden keyed to Utah's natives — showy milkweed for monarchs, rabbitbrush for checkerspots, and native willows and chokecherry for swallowtails and admirals — and to leave brush piles and leaf litter intact, since they shelter the very butterflies that will be the first on the wing. The big swallowtail summers in the canyons are still months away.
Trees This Month
February holds Utah's trees in late winter, but the first stirrings show. Streamside willows push silvery pussy willow catkins along canyon creeks, and the buds of Fremont cottonwood, foothill boxelder, and bigtooth maple begin to swell and redden on warm afternoons. The state tree, quaking aspen, still stands bare and pale across the snowbound Wasatch and Uintas, its clonal trunks catching the low sun.
The evergreens carry the landscape: Utah juniper and Colorado pinyon blanket the red-rock plateaus, beginning to release pale pollen on the mildest days, and the high forests of Engelmann spruce, subalpine fir, and Douglas-fir hold dark green over deep snow. Gambel oak thickets still cling to their bronze marcescent leaves on the foothills. In the southwest, the desert's Joshua trees and gnarled singleleaf pinyon stand evergreen in the warming Dixie sun, where bud-break comes earliest in the state.
Go deeper with the Utah guides
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Same month elsewhere: February in Vermont · February in Virginia · February in Washington