June 28, 2026
Three native milkweeds are in full flower this week—rush-desert milkweed (Asclepias subulata), Arizona milkweed (A. angustifolia), and desert milkweed (A. erosa)—all of them fruiting alongside their fresh blooms. These are perennial species that flower year-round in this region, a rhythm shaped by the Sonoran climate.
have been sighted six times in the past two months, with the most recent appearance on June 16. That consistent milkweed availability—blooming when most temperate nectar sources have faded—may be stalling some migrants that should be heading toward California breeding grounds. Monarchs are obligate milkweed specialists at the larval stage, and abundant food here can trap individuals that would normally press northward. The ecological trade-off is real: without year-round flowering plants, this desert would be uninhabitable for the early season butterflies that do make it through, but the same abundance may be delaying the continent-wide migration cycle itself.
June 25, 2026
Saguaro fruit is dropping. On June 22, while flowers still hung open on the towering cacti, ripe fruit began falling to the ground—a critical food pulse that sustains the desert's animals before the monsoon arrives. Over the past 60 days, have responded in force, with more than 110 sightings recorded across the region. were last seen on June 18, their breeding season waning as migrants and other species move in to claim the sugar-rich bounty.
are already on the ground foraging the fallen fruit—the reliable sign of the harvest. For the Tohono O'odham people, this moment marks their new year. The ripening of saguaro fruit has long been the signal to gather, using long saguaro-rib poles to knock more fruit down and call the summer rains. The ecological and cultural calendars align precisely here; what the desert needs and what its people have always practiced remain one and the same.