Nebraska Nature Guide: November 2026
November strips Nebraska down to its winter bones. The leaves come down, the prairie fades to bleached grass, the last great goose flights move through, and the first hard cold and snow arrive across the open plains as the wintering birds settle in.
What to look for this week
- Feeders are at their winter peak across Nebraska — chickadees, nuthatches, and cardinals work the seed, while bald eagles already gather at open water below the Platte dams and around Lake McConaughy.
- The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks in a short, sharp burst around January 3; watch after midnight from a dark Sandhills site such as Merritt Reservoir.
- A planning week — order seeds and favor short-season varieties that finish in the cold Sandhills and panhandle corner of the state.
- The massive bare cottonwoods along the Platte and Missouri show their winter silhouettes, the state tree's furrowed gray bark stark against the snow.
Birds This Month
November is a transition from migration to winter in Nebraska. The last large flights of geese — snow, Ross's, white-fronted, and Canada — move through the Rainwater Basin and along the Platte, and the final sandhill cranes and many ducks push south, though numbers of mallards and Canada geese linger wherever open water holds. Bald eagles gather below the Platte dams and at Lake McConaughy as the rivers begin to ice.
The winter birds settle in: dark-eyed juncos, American tree sparrows, Harris's sparrows, and feeder flocks of chickadees, nuthatches, woodpeckers, and cardinals. Rough-legged hawks arrive from the Arctic to hunt the open fields, northern harriers course the marshes, and in irruption years the first common redpolls, pine siskins, and red-breasted nuthatches turn up at feeders. Lapland longspurs and horned larks flock on the bare farmland.
This month's tip: stock and clean the feeders for the winter season, and watch open water below dams for the gathering bald eagles as the cold sets in.
What's Blooming
The wildflower year is over in Nebraska by November. A hard freeze has ended the last asters and goldenrods, and the prairie has shifted fully to its winter palette. What remains is structure and seed: the bleached, rattling stalks of compass plant, coneflower, and blazing star standing through the cold, the seed heads of goldenrod — the state flower — gone to fluff, and the bronze and copper of the prairie grasses, big bluestem and little bluestem, holding their color into early winter.
The bright red stems of red-osier dogwood stand out in the wet draws now that the leaves are down, and the powder-blue cones of female eastern redcedars and the dark drupes of hackberry feed wintering robins, waxwings, and bluebirds. These persistent seeds and fruits are the prairie's winter larder. Indoors, this is the start of amaryllis and forced-bulb season as the garden goes fully dormant outside.
Garden This Month
November closes out the working garden year in Nebraska. Harvest the last of the cold-hardy crops — carrots, kale, leeks, Brussels sprouts, and any greens under cover, all sweetened by the frosts — and pull and compost the spent plants. Finish planting garlic and any remaining spring bulbs early in the month before the ground freezes hard. The key task is winter protection: mulch strawberries, perennials, and fall-planted bulbs to buffer the freeze-thaw cycles of Nebraska's open, frequently snowless winter, which heave shallow roots and split crowns.
Drain and store hoses and shut off outdoor water before a hard freeze, clean and oil tools before storing them, and empty and store clay pots so they don't crack. Wrap or screen the trunks of young trees against winter sun-scald and rabbit and deer damage, common on the open Plains, and water evergreens, new trees, and shrubs deeply while you still can — a dry, windy Nebraska winter desiccates them when the soil is frozen and roots cannot replace lost moisture.
Zone 4b (Sandhills and panhandle): the garden is dormant and often snow-dusted — finish mulching strawberries and perennials, make sure hoses are drained and stored, and protect young trees from sun-scald and deer in the long, open winter here.
Zone 5a (central Nebraska): wrap up the season — mulch perennials and bulbs against freeze-thaw, harvest the last frost-sweetened carrots and kale, drain irrigation, and water any evergreens deeply before the ground freezes hard.
Zone 5b (southeast, lower Missouri Valley): the mildest tier still has a little harvest — pull the last hardy greens and roots under cover, finish planting garlic and bulbs early in the month, and mulch beds before the ground locks up.
What's at the Farmers Market
November shifts Nebraska's markets to the storage and indoor season. Most outdoor markets wind down, but the harvest cured in fall is at its fullest: winter squash, pumpkins, potatoes, onions, garlic, carrots, beets, parsnips, turnips, cabbage, and Brussels sprouts on the stalk all keep for months. The last apples and fresh cider are still around.
Frost-sweetened kale, collards, spinach, and greens from hoop houses, honey, farm eggs, and grass-fed Sandhills beef, pork, and turkey for the holiday round out the offerings, along with the first holiday greenery and wreaths. This is the month to lay in storage crops for the winter: keep onions, garlic, and squash cool and dry, store carrots, beets, and other roots cool and humid, and the harvest will carry you well into the cold months ahead.
Night Sky This Month
November's long, cold, clear nights bring the year's stargazing season into full swing across Nebraska, with the early winter sky rising in the east. The darkest skies remain the Sandhills around Valentine and Merritt Reservoir, the Niobrara valley, and the panhandle's Wildcat Hills, where the cold, dry air offers exceptional transparency.
In the evening, the Great Square of Pegasus and the Andromeda Galaxy (M31) ride high overhead, with Cassiopeia near the zenith and the Pleiades and orange Aldebaran in Taurus climbing in the east, leading Orion up by late evening. The Summer Triangle sets in the west. The Leonid meteor shower peaks around mid-November, a modest shower in most years, best watched after midnight from a dark Sandhills site.
This year's exact Leonid timing and planet positions vary — the printable Nebraska night-sky guide gives the current month's details for your location.
Butterflies & Pollinators
November all but ends the Nebraska butterfly year. The first stretches of hard freeze and snow shut down the season, and the last warm-day stragglers — an occasional orange sulphur or common buckeye on an unusually mild afternoon early in the month — soon vanish. Monarchs have completed their migration to the Mexican wintering forests. Nebraska's butterflies are now settled into their overwintering forms across the landscape.
The mourning cloaks, eastern commas, and question marks are tucked as adults behind loose cottonwood and elm bark, in woodpiles, and under brush along the river timber, their bodies loaded with antifreeze to survive the coming deep cold. The prairie-specialist regal fritillary sleeps as a tiny first-instar caterpillar deep in the Sandhills and tallgrass prairie thatch, and the swallowtails wait as chrysalises tucked along stems and in leaf litter while the hairstreaks and skippers overwinter as eggs and chrysalises. Leaving the leaf litter, standing prairie stems, and brush undisturbed through winter shelters all of them until spring.
Trees This Month
November bares Nebraska's trees. The last leaves come down — the brilliant gold of the eastern cottonwoods along the rivers fades and falls, the silver maples, hackberries, and walnuts finish dropping, and only the russet, marcescent leaves of the bur oaks and the papery foliage of young ironwoods still cling, rattling in the wind across the bottomlands and bluffs.
With the canopy gone, the winter structure of the forest emerges: the massive furrowed trunks and broad crowns of the riverside cottonwoods, the corky bark and wide branching of the bur oaks, and the dark green of the eastern redcedars standing out in the draws and fencerows, their powder-blue cones feeding cedar waxwings and robins. In the panhandle the ponderosa pines of the Pine Ridge hold their needles through the cold. This is the start of the dormant season — a fine time to plant bare-root and balled trees early in the month and to plan winter pruning of oaks during their safe dormant window.
Go deeper with the Nebraska guides
The complete Nebraska birding, native-plant, wildflower, and night-sky guides — or the whole year in one bundle.
Same month elsewhere: November in Nevada · November in New Hampshire · November in New Jersey