Skip to content

Seattle Culture

June in Seattle Delivers

The city’s in-between season has its moments

By Sarah Stackhouse June 6, 2025

A market stall displays colorful bouquets of flowers under green hanging lights, with customers browsing in the background.
Photo by cpaulfell / Shutterstock

The season is starting to turn. Lawnmowers are buzzing, the air smells like barbecue, and suddenly the herbs in the garden are out of control. Here are a few things to love before summer officially begins.

Fresh flowers from the farmers market

Buckets of peonies, poppies, sweet peas, and snapdragons line the stalls — just grab whatever looks happiest. One big bunch can brighten up a room, or split them into a few mini bouquets and scatter the cheer around.

Vegan strawberry milk ice cream at Frankie & Jo’s

Strawberries are hitting their stride — and this scoop proves it. With a creamy coconut-oat milk base, homemade June-picked strawberry jam, and a little chia for crunch, it tastes like summer. It’s vegan, gluten-free, and ships nationwide. Send some to friends sweating through 100 degrees somewhere else.

A good crossbody fanny pack

You see them everywhere right now — on trails, at the grocery store, in line for coffee. At first I wasn’t sure, but they’re so useful. I wear it on my waist when I bike, then sling it across my chest to run errands. They’re just the right size to hold the necessities and leave you feeling free. Here’s a soft, colorful one, and here’s a simple sporty one.

Waiting on a farm share

It’s exciting to know a box of produce is on its way and that dinner will figure itself out. The first CSA delivery always feels like opening a surprise gift — a tangle of greens, maybe a bunch of garlic scapes you didn’t plan for. Mine starts next week.  If you’re looking for a share, here are a few to check out: Pike Box, River Run Farm, and First Light Farm.

Lowrider Cookie Co.’s Pride stuffed lemon funfetti cookie

They’re soft and lemony, with rainbow sprinkles folded into the dough. Some of the proceeds go to Burien Pride, so you feel fantastic about buying them for coworkers on a warm, sunny day.

Fewer pesky bugs

The spiders are still small — not yet bulked up from a couple months of feasting. Flies and mosquitoes haven’t peaked; that comes later in the summer. And so far, not a single aphid in the garden. For now, we can eat outside in peace and leave the mesh screens off the windows.

Anthony White’s Somethin’ Somethin’ at Greg Kucera Gallery

White’s work is wild. For this show, he created intricate pieces by hand, using a pen-like tool to extrude melted PLA plastic onto wood panels. The results are a complex, beautiful mess of everyday objects, arranged in a way that feels playful but a little uneasy too. I was blown away by the things the show made me consider — which is exactly what art should do. Somethin’ Somethin’ is on view through June 28.

Follow Us

The World Within Reach

The World Within Reach

This summer, staying local doesn’t have to mean staying still. Explore Seattle as a global journey.

Summer in Seattle can be hard to give up — the long awaited celebration of bright sunshine, inviting hills and welcoming bodies of water. For those deciding to stay local this season, the avid, curious traveler can still explore the city as a portal to travel abroad. A mosaic of global cultures awaits, with food,…

Playtime on the Pier

Playtime on the Pier

Seattle’s long-awaited Pier 58 reopens with a jellyfish tower and sweeping views

Seattle pulled it off. After years of construction, detours, and debate, the city is getting another major piece of its waterfront back. Pier 58 officially reopens Friday, July 25, as part of the 20-acre Waterfront Park transformation. What was once a crumbling concrete deck is now a bright, marine-themed play zone with a 25-foot jellyfish-inspired…

The Pulse: Sun Baked

The Pulse: Sun Baked

Subaru drivers and late bloomers

Are you ready? We’re supposed to hit 80 degrees next week. Time to get creative with your fashion choices and cooling devices, Seattle. Also — who’s following the Tour de France? I tore through the Netflix documentary and now I’m all in. Jonas Vingegaard has my whole heart. I hope he pulls through after a…

Bat Signal Seattle

Bat Signal Seattle

Bats are out this summer, and so are the community scientists tracking them

By mid-July, most Seattleites have clocked the summer clichés: backyard rosé, panic-buying box fans, and chatting with strangers in the grocery store about how nice it is. But here’s something better: bats. Washington is home to 14 species, 10 of which live in western Washington. They’re tiny, nocturnal insectivores that eat thousands of bugs a…