West Virginia Nature Guide: July 2026
July is high summer in West Virginia — warm and humid in the valleys, cool and green on the high ridges, the breeding season winding toward fledging, the meadows and gardens at peak bloom and harvest, and the butterflies at their most abundant. The mountains offer relief while the markets overflow.
What to look for this week
- Feeders are at their winter peak across West Virginia — cardinals, Carolina chickadees, titmice, and juncos work the seed while the Brooks Bird Club's Christmas Counts wrap up statewide.
- The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks in a short, sharp burst around January 3 — watch after midnight from a dark mountain site like Spruce Knob or Dolly Sods.
- A planning week — review last season and order seeds early, before the short-season varieties the Allegheny high country depends on sell out.
Birds This Month
July is the quiet, settled heart of the West Virginia breeding season. The dawn chorus eases from its June peak as birds finish nesting, but the forests still hold song — red-eyed vireos, wood thrushes, scarlet tanagers, ovenbirds, and indigo buntings sing through the warm mornings, and fledglings beg everywhere, following their parents through the green canopy. The high spruce country of Spruce Knob and the Cranberry Wilderness still rings with hermit thrush, dark-eyed junco, and black-throated blue and magnolia warblers.
In the old fields and grasslands, eastern meadowlarks, field sparrows, prairie warblers, yellow-breasted chats, and American goldfinches — late nesters timed to thistle-down — sing on. Ruby-throated hummingbirds battle over the bee balm and jewelweed, chimney swifts and barn swallows sweep the summer skies, and green herons and belted kingfishers work the river edges. The resident northern cardinal, the state bird, raises a second brood. By late July a few shorebirds and the first southbound Louisiana waterthrushes hint that fall migration is already beginning at the season's turn.
What's Blooming
July is the peak of West Virginia's summer wildflower bloom in the meadows, roadsides, and high pastures. The open country glows with black-eyed Susan, ox-eye sunflower, wild bergamot, butterfly weed, common and swamp milkweed, Queen Anne's lace, chicory, coneflower, bouncing bet, and the first joe-pye weed and ironweed. The mountain meadows of the Allegheny Highlands and the glades of Cranberry hold their cool-summer flora at its best, including the carnivorous sundews and pitcher plants of the high bogs.
In the cool ravines the great rhododendron, the state flower, finishes its bloom, and the dry slopes brighten with sourwood and the orange of jewelweed (spotted touch-me-not) along the moist stream banks, a hummingbird and bee favorite. Roadsides carry day-lilies, evening primrose, black-eyed Susan, and the climbing trumpet creeper. In gardens, coneflowers, bee balm, phlox, daylilies, lilies, and the first black-eyed Susans peak. The high country, weeks cooler than the valleys, keeps its flowers fresh well into the summer.
Garden This Month
July is peak harvest and high maintenance in West Virginia gardens. The warm-season crops pour in — pick summer squash, zucchini, cucumbers, beans, and the first tomatoes, peppers, and sweet corn in the warmer valleys, with the high country running a few weeks behind. Harvest blueberries, blackberries, and raspberries, dig new potatoes and garlic, and pull onions as the tops fall. Pick beans, squash, and cucumbers every day or two to keep the plants producing.
The work now is keeping pace with the heat and humidity: water deeply an inch or more a week, mulch heavily to hold moisture and cool the roots, and side-dress heavy feeders. Watch for the summer pests and diseases — Japanese beetles, squash bugs, hornworms, and the early blights and mildews that thrive in the humid mountain air — and stay ahead of the weeds. Crucially, July is when the fall garden begins: sow broccoli, cabbage, kale, collards, carrots, beets, and a late round of beans by mid-to-late month for the autumn harvest. Keep deadheading flowers and watering containers through the warmest weeks of the year.
Zone 6a (central mountains): the garden is in full summer production. Harvest daily, keep beds watered an inch a week, mulch against the heat, and start the fall garden — sow broccoli, cabbage, kale, and carrots mid-month for autumn harvest while the soil is warm.
Zone 6b (foothills & mid-elevation valleys): peak harvest and heat. Pick beans, squash, and cucumbers constantly to keep them producing, side-dress and water tomatoes, watch for blight and beetles, and sow fall brassicas and a late planting of beans.
Zone 7a (Ohio & Kanawha valleys): the warmest, most productive country, with the first tomatoes ripening. Harvest heavily, water deeply in the heat, mulch to conserve moisture, and begin fall plantings of brassicas, carrots, and beets for autumn while keeping the summer crops fed.
What's at the Farmers Market
July is one of the most abundant months at West Virginia markets. The summer fruit peaks — blueberries, blackberries, raspberries, and the first peaches from the Eastern Panhandle orchards — and the first ripe tomatoes and sweet corn arrive from the warmer valleys, the signatures of mountain summer. The vegetable tables overflow with summer squash, zucchini, cucumbers, green beans, new potatoes, beets, carrots, cabbage, onions, garlic, and the first peppers and eggplant.
Bunches of fresh herbs, cut flowers, and the first sunflowers brighten the stands, alongside honey, eggs, mountain cheeses, and baked goods. Choose tomatoes that are fragrant and give slightly, and store them at room temperature, never in the fridge. Buy and eat sweet corn the same day, keeping the ears in their husks until use, as the sugars convert to starch quickly. Pick squash and cucumbers small and tender, and refrigerate berries dry and unwashed for only a day or two. The markets are at their full summer best.
Night Sky This Month
July nights belong to the summer Milky Way at its richest over West Virginia's dark high country. After the late summer dusk, the Summer Triangle of Vega, Deneb, and Altair rides high overhead, and the band of the Milky Way arches from Cassiopeia in the north down through Cygnus and the bright star clouds of Sagittarius and Scorpius in the south, where the heart of our galaxy glows, studded with nebulae and globular clusters.
Red Antares marks the Scorpion's heart, the teapot of Sagittarius pours its steam of star clouds, and a telescope reveals the Lagoon and Trifid nebulae, the M13 and M22 globular clusters, and dozens more deep-sky wonders. There is no major shower until the Perseids build at month's end. From a dark mountain site such as Spruce Knob, the Cranberry Wilderness, or Watoga State Park, the summer Milky Way is the great reward of these warm nights. The printable West Virginia night-sky guide lists this year's exact planet positions and the best dark-sky sites for your region.
Butterflies & Pollinators
July is the most abundant butterfly month in West Virginia. The swallowtails crowd the gardens and roadside blooms — eastern tiger, spicebush, black, zebra, pipevine, and the big giant swallowtail — and the meadows teem with great spangled fritillaries, monarchs, pearl crescents, common wood-nymphs, silver-spotted skippers, and clouds of grass skippers. The Appalachian Diana fritillary peaks now in the rich southern and central mountain forests, the blue-and-black females joining the orange males — a high point for the state's most coveted butterfly.
This is prime nectaring time: watch milkweed, butterfly weed, joe-pye weed, ironweed, bergamot, dogbane, coneflower, and thistle for the swirling summer crowd. The hairstreaks visit the milkweeds — coral, banded, and gray hairstreaks — and red-spotted purples, viceroys, red admirals, painted ladies, and question marks are widespread. Monarch caterpillars feed on the milkweed, building the brood that will fly south in the fall. Leave the blooming milkweed and the nectar plants standing — the pollinator meadow is at its busiest and most rewarding moment of the year.
Trees This Month
July's forests stand in full, dark summer leaf, their flowering finished and their fruits and seeds developing. The sourwood hangs its sprays of white bell flowers on the dry slopes, the last of the great rhododendron, the state flower, fades in the cool ravines, and the basswood finishes its fragrant bloom. Along the streams the buttonbush opens its spherical white flower heads in the wet bottoms, a magnet for bees and butterflies.
The trees now pour their energy into seed: the black cherry ripens its small dark fruits that feed birds and bears, the serviceberry and mulberry finish fruiting, the acorns swell on the oaks, the winged samaras hang on the maples and ashes, and the cones harden on the high-country red spruce, eastern hemlock, and white pine. The cove forests are deep and shaded, the high ridges cool and green, and the whole canopy works through the long days of the West Virginia summer, storing the season's growth toward the coming autumn.
Go deeper with the West Virginia guides
The complete West Virginia birding, native-plant, wildflower, and night-sky guides — or the whole year in one bundle.
Same month elsewhere: July in Wisconsin · July in Wyoming · July in Alabama