Episode 61: The 2026 Milky Way Season
The photographers who come home with photos they love? They didn't just show up. They planned.
In this episode, I'm walking you through the 2026 Milky Way season, month by month, including what to prioritize, when to practice, and how to set yourself up for the images you actually want to create.
Download the free PDF guide here as the companion to this episode:
https://www.kristinerosephotography.com/mwguide
This is part planning resource, part permission slip to approach the year with intention, whether you're returning after a long winter, chasing your first Milky Way photo, or somewhere in between.
Key Takeaways
The Season Has Three Distinct Phases: Early season (April through June), peak season (July and August), and late season (September and October) each call for a different mindset. Early season is for shaking off the rust and experimenting without pressure. Peak season is for creating the images you've been building toward. Late season is for savoring them.
Every Month Has Its Own Gift: April offers the wide arch of the Milky Way before it climbs too high. May gives you the most total shooting hours of any month. And September, my personal favorite, lets you shoot after dinner and still be home before midnight. Knowing what each month offers helps you plan for what you actually want.
August 12th Is a Date Worth Circling: This year, new moon falls on August 12th, which is also the peak of the Perseid meteor shower. It doesn't happen often. If there's one date to clear your calendar for in 2026, this is it.
Planning Doesn't Have to Be Complicated: Pick one or two target images for each phase of the season. Early. Peak. Late. Write them down. That's the start. Once you ask the question, you've already done more than most.
Conclusion
The season is already here. And the photographers who create images they love this year are the ones who thought about it before the clear nights arrived.
Recent Posts