

Click here for a map and directions.īolton Spring Farm Facebook page. With more than five acres of pumpkins boasting 20 different varieties, you are certain to find your perfect pumpkin to carve! Hayrides start the third weekend in September and run from 12 pm - 5 pm Saturday, Sunday and on Columbus Day. Take a hayride through the orchard to our expansive gardens where you can Pick-Your-Own pumpkin. They also have peaches, pears, and plums in their farmstand. Picnic tables provided, country farmstand with homemade hot dumplings, pies, and donuts.

CLEARVIEW FARMS STERLING MA PATCH
Pick-Your-Own Apples McIntosh, Cortland, Crispin, Red Delicious, Empire, Spartan, Macoun - Baldwin, Rome, Spencer, Blushing Gold - Ida Red, Fuji Hayride to the Pumpkin Patch on Saturday and Sunday from 12 pm. Pick Your Own Apples, McIntosh, Cortland, Red Delicious, Macoun. Picnic tables provided, country farm stand with homemade hot dumplings, pies, and donuts. Containers provided, children welcome, groups by appointment on weekdays. Directions: 2 miles East of Exit 27 off Route 495 on Route 117 near the Stow/Bolton line. Email: Open: daily from 9 am to 4:30 pm, starts Labor Day for apples, 3 weeks later for pumpkins.

Bolton Spring Farm - pick-your-own apples, pumpkins, hayridesġ49 Main Street - Route 117, Bolton, MA.If you know of any others, please tell us using the add a farm form! Worcester County Not all areas of any state, nor even every state, have apples and pumpkins orchards that are open to the public. This combined with crop rotation and natural fertilizer use helps Clearview Farm produce a healthy product.Apple And Pumpkin U-Pick Orchards in Worcester County, Massachusetts in 2023, by countyīelow are the U-Pick orchards and farms for apples and pumpkins that we know of in this area. IPM promotes minimized pesticide use by using environmentally sound practices. Rick is certified in Integrated Pest Management (IPM) methods and uses them to grow their orchards, fruits, and vegetables. The farm is not certified organic due in part to the fact that orchards don’t lend themselves to crop rotation, an essential part of organic farming. The farm produces up towards 30 varieties of apples from early macs to late baldwins – a winter apple great for cider. It started with a single PYO pumpkin patch for their 3 daughters to earn enough to have a horse. They were the first to make it a retail farm operation. Norman and Edith’s oldest grand daughter, Diane, and her husband, Rick, moved to the farm in 1989. In the 1940's Norman planted the standard orchard of mostly Macintosh apples, still used today for PYO, and cider apples. Their only surviving child, Edith Wood, a well-known elementary school teacher in town married “the boy next door”, Norman Sawyer, from the Sawyer farmstead of ‘Mary Had a Little Lamb’ fame. The original Clearview Farm property, which consisted of a traditional farm house with post and beam barn and wind driven well, was purchased by Caswell and Etta Wood in 1906.
