June
June drifts in with a darkness that barely wants to form. The evenings stretch themselves thin, the sky holding onto its blue long past the hour it should surrender it. But when night finally settles — slowly, gently — there’s still plenty to see if you linger here beside me.
High overhead stands Hercules, quiet and resolute in the pale summer dusk. He’s a patient presence, one I’ve watched take up his post every June, bracing the sky as the shortest nights slip past. Close by glides Cygnus, drifting through the still-warm air with a calm, familiar grace. And nearby hangs Aquila, steadfast companion of summer’s high evenings, its shape holding firm while the last of the light ebbs away.
To the west, Leo is making his long, slow exit from the season. I’ve seen him stride across the spring sky for months, but June is when he finally leans toward the horizon, giving way to the constellations of deeper summer.
Turn north and you’ll find Ursa Major, the Plough, circling steadily as always — a constant presence even in these barely-dark nights. Just beside the Great Bear stretches Lynx, faint and quiet, threading its way between larger shapes with a kind of understated confidence. And above them rests Cepheus, tilted thoughtfully in the northern sky, keeping his gentle vigil over the edge of the field.
This is June’s sky — pale, drawn-out, softened by the lingering light. The darkness comes late, and not for long, but when it does, the constellations arrange themselves with a quiet sense of order.
Stay with me a while. The nights are short, yes, but they still hold their own kind of wonder — patient, delicate, and easy to miss unless you’re paying attention. I’ll help you look.
Sounds and Smells
The air is soft and heavy with growth. Wild roses and honeysuckle share the hedges now, their scents drifting and tangling together — sweet, heady, and strongest just as the light gives out. Evening Primrose opens one yellow bloom after another, a slow unfurling for the night shift of pollinators.
When dusk deepens, the first bats appear — the long-eared ones slipping through the trees like thoughts, their slow wings barely stirring the air. You’ll hear the soft hum of insects rising from the grass, and if the night is still, the droning flight of a cockchafer or the whirr of a moth at the flowers. The Elephant Hawk-moth comes then, drawn by honeysuckle’s perfume, bright pink and olive even in half-light.
Further off, a tawny owl begins its steady call — answered faintly from the woods across the valley. Between those notes, the village quietens until only the rustle of leaves and the scent of cut hay remain.
And then, right at ground level, tiny green lights start to glow among the grasses — glow-worms, the night’s smallest beacons, calling to one another through the dark.
June evenings feel endless: the air full of sweetness and movement, a slow exchange between day and night. Sit a while and listen — you’ll find that the dark isn’t empty at all, just busy in a quieter way.
