New Jersey

New Jersey Nature Guide: June 2026

June settles New Jersey into summer — migration is over, breeding season is in full swing, and the long days fill with birdsong, fireflies, and the bloom of meadows and the Pine Barrens. The shore warms, and the first big harvest of the Garden State arrives at the markets.

What to look for this week

  • Feeders are at their winter peak — chickadees, titmice, nuthatches, and cardinals work the seed, with dark-eyed juncos foraging beneath as the year's hardiest residents settle in.
  • The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks in a short, sharp burst around January 3; watch the northeast after midnight from a dark Pine Barrens or shore site.
  • A planning week at the kitchen table — order seeds, sketch next year's beds, and leave any snow banked over perennials as insulation against the cold.

Birds This Month

June is the heart of the breeding season in New Jersey, and the woods, fields, and marshes ring with song from before dawn. Resident and summering birds are on territory: wood thrush, ovenbird, and scarlet tanager in the forests, indigo bunting, common yellowthroat, field sparrow, and the state bird, the American goldfinch, in the brushy fields, and Baltimore and orchard orioles in the shade trees. Eastern whip-poor-wills and chuck-will's-widows call through the Pine Barrens nights.

On the coast, the salt marshes and beaches are busy with nesting ospreys feeding young, laughing gulls, willets, clapper rails, and the threatened piping plover, least tern, and black skimmer on the protected beaches. Glossy ibis, egrets, and herons work the marshes from their heronries, and the late, lingering horseshoe crab spawn still draws a few shorebirds early in the month.

This month's tip: get out at first light for the dawn chorus at its richest, and visit a Pine Barrens road at dusk to hear whip-poor-wills and watch for nightjars.

Binoculars for backyard birding

Get the complete birds guide

What's Blooming

June shifts the bloom from the shaded woods to the open meadows, wetlands, and Pine Barrens. Field and roadside flowers take over: oxeye daisy, black-eyed Susan, common milkweed in fragrant pink clusters, butterfly weed blazing orange, wild bergamot, Deptford pink, and the first Queen Anne's lace. Wet meadows and pond edges show blue flag iris, swamp milkweed, and pickerelweed.

The Pine Barrens reach a flowering peak: mountain laurel and sheep laurel color the plains, the carnivorous pitcher plants and sundews flower in the bogs, and rare bog orchids — grass pinks, rose pogonia, and others — open in the wet savannas, treasures of the region. Along the coast, seaside goldenrod greens up and the dunes hold blooming beach pea and prickly-pear cactus, New Jersey's native cactus, with its yellow flowers on the sandy barrens and shore.

Get the complete blooms guide

Garden This Month

June is when the New Jersey garden hits its stride. The warm-season crops are established and growing fast — keep tomatoes staked and pruned, cucumbers and squash trellised, and pole beans climbing. Water deeply and consistently, especially in the sandy soils of South Jersey and the shore that dry quickly, and mulch to hold moisture and keep weeds down. Side-dress heavy feeders like corn and tomatoes with compost as they size up.

Keep succession-sowing beans, corn, and lettuce (heat-tolerant varieties now), and start seedlings of fall broccoli, cabbage, and other brassicas late in the month for midsummer transplanting. Harvest the first crops — peas, lettuce, garlic scapes, early summer squash and zucchini — and pick often to keep plants producing. Watch for the first cucumber beetles, squash bugs, and tomato hornworms, and pull or hand-pick before they multiply. Deadhead annuals and perennials to extend the bloom.

Garden tools & seed-starting supplies

Get the complete garden guide

What's at the Farmers Market

June markets in New Jersey overflow with early-summer abundance. Strawberries are at their peak early in the month, and blueberries begin by late June as the Hammonton crop ripens. Peas, lettuces, spinach, radishes, scallions, spring onions, garlic scapes, the first summer squash and zucchini, cucumbers, and beets crowd the stands. Cherries appear from the orchards.

The last of the asparagus finishes early in the month, and new potatoes and the first green beans arrive toward the end. Cut flowers, honey, and eggs round out the tables. Choose strawberries that are fully red and fragrant and use them fast; pick blueberries that are plump and dusty-blue and refrigerate them dry. Select squash and cucumbers that are firm and glossy, and peas with bright, full pods. The Garden State's signature summer harvest is just getting started.

Get the complete market guide

Night Sky This Month

June has New Jersey's shortest nights, bracketing the summer solstice around June 20, so dark sky time is brief — but the summer constellations are arriving. The Summer Triangle of Vega, Deneb, and Altair climbs in the east through the evening, and the Milky Way begins to arch up from the southeast late at night. Hercules rides high overhead, carrying the magnificent globular cluster M13, a showpiece in any telescope.

Low in the south, the head of Scorpius rises with its red heart, Antares, and the rich star clouds toward the galaxy's center begin to clear the horizon. There's no major meteor shower this month, so June is for casual viewing of the bright summer stars and a first look at the returning Milky Way after twilight finally fades — which is very late this time of year.

For real darkness, the Pine Barrens and the remote southern shore are best, and you'll need to wait until well after 10 p.m. for full dark. Exact planet positions vary year to year — the printable New Jersey night-sky guide gives this year's details for your area.

Beginner telescopes & star charts

Get the complete sky guide

Butterflies & Pollinators

June butterflies are abundant and varied across New Jersey. The swallowtails remain prominent — eastern tiger, spicebush, and black swallowtails, with the southern zebra swallowtail turning up as an uncommon stray near its scarce Delaware-River pawpaws — joined by the big orange great spangled fritillary emerging now to nectar on milkweed and bergamot. Pearl crescents, question marks, red admirals, American ladies, common buckeyes, and a growing variety of skippers work the meadows, while the Pine Barrens host specialties like the Hessel's hairstreak of the cedar swamps and various elfins and duskywings. Monarch caterpillars feed on milkweed and the summer's first home-grown adults emerge. The blooming common milkweed and butterfly weed are now crucial nectar and host plants. June is a fine month to plant a sunny native nectar bed and to watch caterpillars on milkweed, dill, parsley, and spicebush in the garden.

Get the complete butterflies guide

Trees This Month

By June the New Jersey forest is in deep, full-summer leaf and the late-flowering trees take their turn. Tulip tree finishes its high-canopy bloom, black locust and black cherry have set fruit, and the native sweetbay magnolia opens its lemony white flowers in the swampy coastal-plain woods. American holly blooms inconspicuously, setting the berries that will redden by winter, and catalpa hangs its showy white flower clusters along roadsides and old farmsteads.

In the Pine Barrens, the pitch pines finish their pollen shed and carry fresh candles of growth, and the highbush blueberry, a wild relative of the cultivated crop, ripens its first fruit in the bogs. The shade is dense now beneath the closed oak, maple, hickory, and beech canopy, and the spring wildflowers have largely gone to leaf and seed below. The forest settles into the steady, deep green of high summer, growth and fruiting underway across every layer.

Get the complete trees guide

Go deeper with the New Jersey guides

The complete New Jersey birding, native-plant, wildflower, and night-sky guides — or the whole year in one bundle.

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Same month elsewhere: June in New Mexico · June in New York · June in North Carolina