One constant in the evening sky, that has been visible and easily spottable right after sunset has been Venus. On days the moonrise takes place late in the night or moon is absent altogether, it is the brightest object in the night sky.?
Venus is anyway the third brightest object in our sky after the sun and the moon.?
It has faithfully stuck around the spring evening skies and some part of the summer too, justifying the evening star tag, however, as the planets change position, the evening star will soon leave the night sky and will stop being visible.?
Venus is about to leave the evening sky very soon. In late April, around the 28th, Venus was the brightest it has been/will be all year. Through the end of May it will keep hanging out low in the west. On June 3 it will pass between the Earth and the sun, this transition will make it visible in the eastern sky just before sunrise.
It makes for a beautiful sight right after sunset these days but it will keep dipping lower and lower toward the horizon until it eventually disappears.?
You can watch it daily for the limited days in May, however if you happen to have a telescope it would be a good idea to look at Venus through that. As it is moving close to Earth its disc size is increasing as its phase is shrinking. It can be seen as a crescent through your telescope because of this, and a pretty large one at that.?
But even if you do not have a telescope do not miss your chance to look at the bright evening star, while you have the chance.