Kaw Valley Almanac
Note from the Times: The Kaw Valley Almanac is a contributed piece that runs each week. Find more information and older editions at kawvalleyalmanac.com, and follow @KVAlmanac on Bluesky.
this week’s Almanac
Kaw Valley Almanac for July 6-12, 2026
This is a male Widow skimmer, so named because the black markings of both sexes of the dragonfly are suggestive of funeral garb. The males pick off insects in midair and the dragonfly nymphs eat mosquito larvae.
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Kaw Valley Almanac for June 29 – July 5, 2026
Daisy fleabane is a common wildflower found across the state and is not seen as a particularly nice one. But tell that to the bees, butterflies, grasshoppers, crickets, moths and more who collect its nectar, eat its leaves, lay their eggs and otherwise call it home.
Kaw Valley Almanac for June 22-28, 2026
In area prairies, blackeyed susan, echinacea, coreopsis, prairie clovers, sensitivebrier, yarrow, daisy fleabane, lead plant dogbane, milkweeds, beebalm and others are blooming.
Kaw Valley Almanac for June 15-21, 2026
This margined leatherwing beetle is a cousin of the lightning bug and is munching on the yellow pollen of a blooming leadplant.
Kaw Valley Almanac for June 8-14, 2026
Elderberry blossoms are opening. The flowers and fruits can be used to make elderberry pancakes, syrup, wine and pie, and the woody stems can be turned into flutes.
Kaw Valley Almanac for June 1-7, 2026
Milkweeds are currently blooming, but this means much more to species other than us, such as this monarch butterfly caterpillar.
Kaw Valley Almanac for May 25-31, 2026
The common milkweed is underrated as a spectacular wildflower, with its fireworks-like spray of fragrant flowers that attract bees, butterflies and other pollinators. Many milkweed species are blooming this week.
Kaw Valley Almanac for May 18-24, 2026
The humble roughleaf dogwood shrub has begun blooming, spectacular in its own right, often overlooked compared to the flowering dogwood. Its flowers certainly got the attention of this summer azure butterfly.
Kaw Valley Almanac for May 11-17, 2026
This giant swallowtail was busy checking each verbena blossom. There are increasing numbers of butterflies with more nectar to drink; you can either try to follow a pollinator or just watch a cluster of flowers and see who comes by.
Kaw Valley Almanac for May 4-10, 2026
This carpenter bee is enjoying the nectar from the spider milkweed in Lexington Park in Johnson County.
Kaw Valley Almanac for April 27 – May 3, 2026
Spiderworts are heralding the beginning of the next stage of prairie wildflowers. This is when the small wildflowers finish up and are replaced by taller species that stay above the newly greening prairie grasses or are shaded out in the woods.
Kaw Valley Almanac for April 20-26, 2026
Prairies have spring ephemerals, as evidenced by this lovely wild hyacinth, which is in the lily family in the eastern quarter of the state.
Kaw Valley Almanac for April 13-19, 2026
Recent rains have triggered morels, so go check your favorite haunts. Several have been seen under cedar trees this spring, something that only happens when conditions are just right.
Kaw Valley Almanac for April 6-12, 2026
A sure sign of spring is when the delicately lobed dutchman’s breeches leaves are joined by those white, upside down row white pants/flowers, with yellow belts at the bottom signaling the queen bumblebee where to poke her long tongue for nectar.
Kaw Valley Almanac for March 30-April 5, 2026
Five-petaled false rue anemone is one of the first spring flowers to start blooming in native oak hickory woods. See if you’ve had enough rain for these to bloom!
Kaw Valley Almanac for March 23-29, 2026
The dust in the foreground is pollen coming off a male eastern red cedar tree last week. Expect the trees to replenish and send out enough pollen to make it miserable for allergy sufferers in coming days.
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