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Spring on Penn’s Campus

A look at students working, playing games, and otherwise enjoying the spring weather on campus.

Daffodils growing on Penn's campus

Ask Alexa, “What’s the forecast for today?” on any day this spring, and the response has ranged anywhere from 30° to nearly 90°, with thunderstorms giving way to blustery winds followed by cloudless skies, all before noon. According to the 2026 Old Farmers’ Almanac long-range forecast—a seasonal, not daily, forecast—“the spring outlook predicts warmer-than-normal temperatures across much of the United States, with a few exceptions.”

Those “few exceptions” have been the norm on Penn’s campus. From the time students left for Spring Break to this week, the campus environment has featured nearly every weather phenomenon but snow, despite being cold enough for flurries at night.

Four students playing a game on the lawn

Across campus, when faculty, staff, and students aren’t getting windswept across Locust Walk, the community has enjoyed the blossoming trees turning to a lush green canopy, and has made the most of the highest temperatures. On High Rise Field, students throw footballs, play spikeball, lounge in hammocks, and enjoy the tree-filled campus landscape, which has been part of the Arbor Day Foundation’s Tree Campus Higher Education program for 16 consecutive years for promoting healthy trees and conservation. In 2017, Penn’s campus was officially recognized as an arboretum and botanic garden by the ArbNet Arboretum Accreditation Program. 

Adapted from Penn Today article by Tina Rodia, April 21, 2026.

A tree blooming on Penn's campus

A student working on a laptop outside with flowers blooming in the background

Flowers blooming on a tree

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