Florida Nature Guide: April 2026
April is the peak of Florida's spring migration — trans-Gulf warblers pour through the southern peninsula and pile up at the Dry Tortugas in fallout flights, while Swallow-tailed Kites wheel over the cypress and the roadsides blaze with tickseed. The dry season is ending, the gardens push their warm-season crops against the building heat, and the nights stay pleasant under deep galaxy-rich skies.
What to look for this week
- The Christmas Bird Count season peaks across Florida, with Merritt Island and the Everglades tallying huge numbers of wintering ducks, spoonbills, and wood storks.
- The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks in a brief, sharp burst around January 3 — best after midnight from the dark Kissimmee Prairie or Big Cypress.
- The cool-season vegetable garden is in full production statewide; harvest broccoli, collards, and lettuce, and keep frost cloth ready in the north.
Birds This Month
April is the high tide of Florida's spring migration and one of the very best birding months of the year. Trans-Gulf migrants surge through the peninsula, and the Dry Tortugas stage legendary fallouts — when a cold front meets the returning birds, the trees on Garden Key fill with exhausted Cape May, Blackpoll, Bay-breasted, Blackburnian, Cerulean, and dozens of other warblers, alongside tanagers, orioles, buntings, grosbeaks, and the great seabird colony of Sooty and Brown Noddies on Bush Key. Coastal hammocks and migrant traps like Fort De Soto, Honeymoon Island, and the Keys hold the same flood of songbirds.
Over the cypress swamps and prairies of the south, Swallow-tailed Kites wheel in elegant numbers, freshly returned to nest, and Mississippi Kites arrive in the Panhandle. The wading-bird rookeries at Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary are packed with growing chicks, and breeding herons, egrets, and Roseate Spoonbills work the shrinking dry-season pools. The endemic Florida Scrub-Jay is feeding young in the scrub, and on the coast Least Terns, Black Skimmers, and Wilson's and Snowy Plovers are settling onto the beach colonies. Resident Northern Mockingbirds, the state bird, sing through the warm nights.
What's Blooming
April is a peak wildflower month in Florida, the roadsides at their most spectacular. The state wildflower, coreopsis (tickseed), blazes yellow along highways and through the flatwoods in great sheets, joined by blanketflower (gaillardia), black-eyed Susan, phlox, lupine, spiderwort, and the white drifts of oakleaf fleabane. The pine flatwoods and prairies hold pawpaw, partridge pea, sundews, yellow stargrass, and the first milkweeds opening for the butterflies.
The Lake Wales Ridge and Ocala scrub bloom with rare endemics — scrub blazing star, garberia, and pawpaws found nowhere else on earth — and the wet prairies green up with the coming rains. In south Florida, the tropical hammocks and pinelands keep their firebush, scorpionstail, beach sunflower, and tropical sage going, and the showy tabebuia and jacaranda trees flower gold and purple along the streets. Gardens overflow with amaryllis, gaillardia, pentas, salvia, and the climbing coral honeysuckle and passionflower that feed the spring butterflies and hummingbirds.
Garden This Month
April is the last full month of Florida's spring vegetable garden before the summer heat takes over, and the warm-season harvest begins. In the north and central regions, the spring tomatoes, peppers, squash, cucumbers, beans, and sweet corn are growing fast and the earliest are ready to pick; keep them watered deeply and mulched against the dry-season heat, and stay ahead of the aphids, hornworms, and caterpillars the warmth brings out. In the south, the dry-season crops are finishing as temperatures climb.
Now is the time to plant the heat-tolerant crops that carry Florida's brutal summer when tomatoes give up: okra, southern (field) peas, sweet potatoes, boniato, calabaza (tropical pumpkin), Malabar spinach, and yard-long beans. Set out warm-season herbs and tropical-fruit trees — mango, avocado, banana, papaya, and starfruit — in the frost-free south as the soil warms and the rains approach. Fertilize the established beds, trellis the vining crops, and watch for the first signs of fungal disease as the humidity rises. The summer 'off-season' begins soon, so harvest and preserve the spring bounty while it lasts.
Zone 10a (south-central Florida & lower east coast): the dry-season vegetable garden is winding down as the heat arrives. Harvest the last tomatoes and peppers, and pivot to the tropical crops — boniato, calabaza, okra, southern peas, and tropical-fruit trees — that thrive through the wet summer.
Zone 8b (north Florida & the Panhandle): the warm-season garden hits full stride. Tomatoes, peppers, squash, beans, and corn are growing fast, and it is the prime time to plant the heat-lovers — okra, southern peas, sweet potatoes, and eggplant — that will carry the long summer.
Zone 9a (north-central Florida): harvest the first spring tomatoes, beans, and squash, and keep mulching and watering as the dry-season heat builds. Shift toward heat-tolerant crops — okra, southern peas, sweet potatoes — and start tropical plantings.
What's at the Farmers Market
April markets feature the spring vegetable harvest and the first summer fruit. Central-Florida blueberries hit their peak now — Florida is the first state in the nation to harvest fresh blueberries, weeks ahead of Georgia and the Carolinas — sold by the pint at markets and U-pick farms across the central counties. Plant City strawberries finish their long season, and the last Valencia oranges linger in the groves.
The vegetable fields keep flowing with tomatoes, bell peppers, snap beans, sweet corn, cucumbers, squash, cabbage, lettuce, and greens from the southern and east-coast growing regions, and the Everglades muck country's spring sweet corn is at its sugary best. Look too for the first new-crop potatoes from the Hastings region near St. Augustine — Florida's potato capital — and sweet onions. Farm stands carry Florida honey, boiled peanuts, and grits. Choose blueberries that are dry, firm, and deeply colored and refrigerate them; eat strawberries quickly; buy sweet corn the day you cook it; and keep tomatoes at room temperature for the best flavor.
Night Sky This Month
April nights are warm and pleasant for stargazing in Florida, and the sky belongs to the deep galaxy fields of spring. Kissimmee Prairie Preserve State Park, the state's first certified International Dark Sky Park, and the wide dark skies of Big Cypress National Preserve are the premier escapes from the Orlando, Tampa, and Miami light domes, where the flat Florida horizon and clear air let faint galaxies emerge. Local astronomy clubs run spring star parties at dark sites around the peninsula.
Overhead, Leo the Lion rides high with bright Regulus, while the vast galaxy clusters of Virgo and Coma Berenices — dozens of galaxies in a small telescope — climb the eastern sky, and the Big Dipper's handle arcs down to brilliant Arcturus in Boötes and on to bluish Spica. The Lyrid meteor shower peaks around April 22, a modest but reliable shower best watched after midnight from a dark prairie or Everglades site. Winter's Orion sinks into the western dusk, closing out the cold-sky season. The printable Florida night-sky guide lists this year's exact meteor-peak dates, planet positions, and dark-sky sites for your region.
Butterflies & Pollinators
April is one of the richest butterfly months in Florida, with the spring broods at full strength. The state butterfly, the zebra longwing, floats through every shaded garden, and the gulf fritillary swarms passionflower across the state. The big swallowtails are abundant — giant, eastern tiger, spicebush, palamedes, and zebra swallowtails patrol the woods and gardens — alongside cloudless and orange-barred sulphurs, white peacocks, common buckeyes, red admirals, painted ladies, long-tailed and silver-spotted skippers, and the coastal great southern whites.
Spring migration shows in the butterflies too, with painted ladies and red admirals streaming north and the pierids drifting along the coasts. Monarchs are breeding on milkweed throughout the central and southern peninsula, and the southeast-coast hammocks are full of emerging atala hairstreaks on coontie. In the pine flatwoods and scrub, watch for hairstreaks, the small native blues, and the dusky and cofaqui giant-skippers. With the wildflowers — tickseed, blanketflower, lupine, pentas, firebush, and Spanish needles — at their spring peak, nectar is everywhere, and the gardens, roadsides, and flatwoods hum with butterflies on every warm afternoon.
Trees This Month
April clothes Florida in full new green. The bald cypress swamps of Corkscrew, Big Cypress, and the blackwater rivers are dense with fresh feathery needles, and the live oaks have finished their leaf exchange, their new crowns deep green under Spanish moss. The Panhandle longleaf, slash, and loblolly pines push fresh candles and finish their pollen drop, and the lowland red maples are in full leaf.
This is the month the southern magnolias begin opening their huge fragrant creamy flowers across the hammocks and gardens of the north and central peninsula, and the fringetree, sweetbay magnolia, and black cherry flower in the woods. In the south, the spectacular flowering trees take over the streets — golden tabebuia, purple jacaranda, orange royal poinciana beginning to bud, and the native geiger tree and seagrape leafing out along the coast. The red mangroves of the Keys and south coast start their pale yellow flowering. The state tree, the sabal palm, readies its summer flower spikes as the wet season approaches.
Go deeper with the Florida guides
The complete Florida birding, native-plant, wildflower, and night-sky guides — or the whole year in one bundle.
Same month elsewhere: April in Georgia · April in Idaho · April in Illinois