Middlefield, CT
Lyman Orchards
Lyman Orchards brings Middlefield apple picking, berries, sunflowers, mazes, and farm-market energy into one big Connecticut...
Farm map
Explore farms by location, town, and route when the interactive map is ready.
Shoreline to hill towns
Pick a shoreline market, a River Valley produce stop, or a Litchfield Hills orchard, then build the rest of the day around it.

Middlefield, Connecticut
Lyman Orchards
Usually active in Spring, Summer and Fall.

Lisbon, Connecticut
Grant's Berry Patch
Usually active in Summer and Fall.

North Branford, Connecticut
Rose Orchards Farm
Usually active in Spring, Summer and Fall.

Bloomfield, Connecticut
4-H Auer Farm
Usually active in Summer and Fall.

Franklin, Connecticut
Blue Slope Farm
Usually active in Winter, Spring, Summer and Fall.

Newtown, Connecticut
Castle Hill Farm
Usually active in Spring, Summer, Fall and Winter.

New Haven, Connecticut
Common Ground Urban Farm
Usually active in Spring, Summer and Fall.

Broad Brook, Connecticut
Dzen Farms Berry Fields
Usually active in Summer and Spring.

New Milford, Connecticut
Freedom Farm Homestead Inc.
Usually active in Winter, Spring, Summer and Fall.

Southbury, Connecticut
Guardians Farm
Usually active in Winter, Spring, Summer and Fall.

Cheshire, Connecticut
Hickory Hill Orchard
Usually active in Spring, Summer and Fall.

Hamden, Connecticut
Hindinger Farm
Usually active in Winter, Spring, Summer and Fall.

Bethlehem, Connecticut
March Farm
Usually active in Spring, Summer and Fall.

Easton, Connecticut
Silverman's Farm
Usually active in Summer and Fall.

Bozrah, Connecticut
Six Paca Farm
Usually active in Winter, Spring, Summer and Fall.

Connecticut farm guide
Connecticut is built for tidy farm loops, with shoreline markets, hill-town orchards, greenhouses, flowers, and cider within easy reach.
A good Connecticut farm day might start with seedlings or strawberries, slip into a flower field, and end with apples, cider, or a farm market tucked beside a stone wall.
The state’s strength is how quickly the scenery changes. Gold Coast errands, River Valley produce runs, Quiet Corner back roads, and Litchfield Hills foliage can all carry a farm stop without turning the day into a production.

Strawberry guide
An updated 2026 Connecticut guide for chasing June berries, choosing the right u-pick farm, and reading same-day field notes before you drive.
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Blueberry guide
A polished half-day guide to Connecticut blueberry fields, orchard markets, bakeries, and family farm stops with useful same-day farm notes.
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Raspberry & blackberry guide
A Connecticut guide for summer raspberry rows, later blackberry picking, orchard markets, shoreline farms, and relaxed family berry trips.
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Pick-your-own
Pick-your-own in Connecticut changes shape every month.
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Farm stands
A farm stand near Hartford should be useful before it is scenic.
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CSA shares
A CSA farm share changes the way a week feels. Instead of deciding everything at the grocery store, you build meals around what the farm harvested.
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Roadside stands
Roadside farm stands are one of the quiet pleasures of Connecticut.
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Cider donuts
Cider donuts in Connecticut are more than a fall treat.
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Pumpkins & corn mazes
Pumpkin season in Connecticut is more than a list of names.
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Maple sugarhouses
Maple season in Connecticut has its own kind of beauty.
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Christmas trees
Christmas tree farms keep the farm calendar going after the harvest fields quiet down.
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Local beef
Buying local beef or a farm meat box in Connecticut feels different from grabbing a single package at the store.
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Local honey
Local honey is one of the easiest farm products to bring home from Connecticut.
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Local farm routes
Greenwich and Stamford are not the first places people picture when they think of New England farms, which is exactly why the nearby farm escapes matter. A short drive north or east can bring you to orchards, farm stores, CSA fields, animals, pumpkins, Christmas trees, and quieter roads that feel far removed from I-95 and Metro-North stations.
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Local farm routes
Danbury and Ridgefield sit in one of Connecticut’s most convenient farm-day regions. The area is close to Fairfield County towns, the New York line, Litchfield County hills, and a cluster of orchards, farm stores, animal farms, and seasonal fields. For families in western Connecticut, a farm visit can be a fall tradition, a summer berry trip, or a quick local-food stop after school.
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Local farm routes
Norwich sits close to one of Connecticut’s most rewarding farm regions. Drive north and east from the city and the roads move into the Quiet Corner, where orchards, berry farms, old villages, farm stands, pastures, and stone walls give eastern Connecticut a slower agricultural feel. It is a different experience from the shoreline or the Hartford suburbs.
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Sunflower guide
A warm local guide to Connecticut sunflower fields, from old farm roads and pick-your-own patches to July blooms, photo fields, and farmstand bouquets.
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Peach & nectarine guide
Plan Connecticut peach and nectarine picking with orchard timing notes, farm stand fruit, and short late-summer drives.
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Apple picking guide
Plan Connecticut apple picking with orchard timing notes, variety cues, cider stops, farm stores, and fall weekends that can bend with the harvest.
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