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. Female black bears and cubs leave the den
. Baby skunks, raccoons, and porcupines are born
. Prairie dog pups emerge from the den
. Abert's
squirrels mating
. Great blue herons are feeding their chicks
. Many songbirds are in courtship, building nests, and laying eggs
. Blue grouse drum and display in coniferous forests
. Great horned owl young fledge
. Bullsnakes (more correctly known as gopher snakes) are mating at The Durango Nature Center (See May 2005 Gopher Snake article).
. Overwintering bumblebee queens harvest pollen and nectar, lay eggs, and begin the new hive. Soon their daughters will be waiting on them, but for now, it is the queens’ turn to do all of the work!
. Caddisflies hatch (emerge) from the rivers in great swarms

. Lilacs and fruit trees bloom and rhubarb is harvested
. Pasqueflowers, spring beauties, blue mustards, candytufts, filaree, and stemless evening primrose are blooming in fields and wild places.
. Male junipers release pollen in abundance, cottonwoods and aspen begin to bloom
Now
is the time to plant cool season vegetables, if you haven’t already. Broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, potatoes, greens and peas all do well in our warm day/cool night spring weather. Don’t
put your tomatoes, squash, corn, peppers or beans out now
without nightly protection. Our average last frost date is
the first week in June, and a late May frost has ruined many
a gardners hopes of ripe tomatoes come summer.

Last Quarter Half Moon:
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| Date |
Sunrise |
Sunset |
Day Length |
| 1st |
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