It’s hard to believe that crisp fall days and sweater weather are lurking around the corner. Resist the urge to mourn another summer in the books and look ahead to those sweet-spot autumn temps that are perfection for outdoor exploring. Over half of Wisconsin is covered in forest, making it an ideal place to view the stunning colors of the harvest season. Take a quick day or weekend trip to partake in the beauty of Wisconsin and enjoy everything from pumpkin patches to train rides.

Pick (or Catapult) Your Perfect Pumpkin

Orange or white, short and squatty or tall and slender, pumpkins come in all shapes and sizes. You'll have your pick at one of Wisconsin's numerous pumpkin farms.

Waldvogel Farm starts its season Sep. 18 and being the biggest in the state, you won't be at a loss for activities. You'll find more than 60 attractions, including the world's largest inflatable pumpkin. Have you ever tried pumpkin bowling? If that's a no, here's your chance. Burch Barn lets you try your hand at knocking down some pins before you start searching for your take-home pumpkin. And at Mommsen's Harvel Hills in Rice Lake, you can catapult pumpkins 300 feet into the air with their medieval trebuchet catapult. 

Get Lost & Found in a Corn Maze

After pumpkin-picking, wind your way through a corn maze and then rest up at one of the rented bone fire areas at Schuster Farm in Deerfield. For those who prefer to do their corn-maze-conquering in the dark, the farm keeps the 20-acre maze open until 11 p.m.

In a mash-up of art, outdoor game and social experiment, Treinen Farm's unique corn mazes have a specific theme each year, with an entire experience built around that theme. Once you enter the maze, you'll be handed a map with missing pieces that are gathered as you make your way to different stages that take you to the finish line. This year's theme is Cat and Other Thought Experiments.

 

Gather Apples (& Maybe Some Peaches, Too!)

It doesn't get any more midwest-fall than picking apples. Eau Claire's The Glass Orchard is a combo orchard and glass blowing studio. After picking apples, take a peek at their shop where customers can find glass-blown pumpkins and ornaments. While you're in the area, stop by Dixon's Autumn Harvest Orchard and Winery that offers free hayrides and mazes for kids on the weekends. 

If you're looking for something more than apples, Ecker's Apple Farm grows Wisconsin peaches in the fall and offers local brews at Hog's Back Brew Farms, a unique beer garden nestled among the apple trees. 

Chug, Chug the Day Away on a Train Ride

Make your harvesting fun uniquely special and view the fall foliage aboard a historic train ride with Mid-Continent Railway. They offer a Pumpkin Special ride that lets riders hop off to pick their pumpkins halfway through at Quartzite Lake.

You can also ditch your four wheels and sit back with East Troy Railroad, which stops at the Elegant Farmer, a popular apple orchard know for its paper bag-baked apple pie.

Can't-Miss Harvest Festivals

Press your own apple cider using historic traditional equipment from the Washington Island Farm Museum at the Fall Fun Fest & Cider Pressing Party. While you're there, sip on local cider while the kids snack on freshly dipped caramel apples.

Did you know Wisconsin has a state fruit? Yep, it's cranberries. The Warrens Cranberry Festival, Sep. 24-26, includes a guided tour of the surrounding cranberry marshes that provide fresh local cranberries. 

Cedarburg's Wine and Harvest Festival, Sep. 18-19, will delight the adult palates in the group, but kids will be entertained watching the pumpkin carving demonstration, pumpkin regatta, grape stomping contests and the giant pumpkin weigh-in. 

Orchards from across the county come together for the Bayfield AppleFest, Oct. 1-3 as a celebration of fall, nature and agriculture. The apple peeling contest is always a highlight, as is the crowning of the Apple Queen. There are more than 15 apple orchards within a few miles of the city limits, making it the perfect place for an orchard visit. Be sure to stop by Superior View Farm, a 100-year-old orchard that is home to the one-of-a-kind Merlot apple that was started right there on the farm. 

— Maria Chambers

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Every October, the Queens County Farm Museum sets up a pumpkin patch, hosts a fall festival and offers a farm experience to us city folk; all without leaving the city. The museum and working historical farm dates back to 1697.  It sits on the largest tract of undisturbed farmland in New York City and is the longest continuously farmed site in the entire state. How’s that for bragging rights?

This Halloween, uncover this hidden gem and venture out to Queens, the most underrated borough for some pumpkin picking and agrarian fun.  Plus, you can get some great ethnic food from the famously diverse borough on the way back home.

When to Go
Any Saturday or Sunday in October for pumpkin picking and exploring the farm on your own.  If you’re looking for more Halloween action, check out the farm museum when it hosts the annual Children’s Fall Festival on Sunday, October 28. Admission includes bounce house, games, magic show, live music and crafts.  We’ve listed the nitty gritty details for all different options at Queens County Farm Museum below.


Don’t Miss
Before you pick your pumpkin and enjoy the Halloween festivities, complete this checklist for experiencing the best of Queens County Farm Museum:

  • The 3-acre corn maze. Can you believe there’s a corn maze in the middle of NYC?
  • The friendly goats. Purchase some goat feed at the gift shop so you can feed the little guys when strolling around the farm.
  • The Italian honeybees. The farm museum has hives where the bees produce delicious wildflower honey. Pick some up at the gift shop!
  • The weekend hayrides. At $2 a person, it’s an easy way to get some transportation entertainment and is a lot more comfortable than the MTA.

How to Get There
The farm museum web site offers great directions for driving and public transportation. Our suggestion is to make life easier and rent a car for a few hours or the entire day. It will be worth the convenience and the fun! Plus, you might save yourself from a meltdown when switching from train to bus after a long wait.

Queens County Farm Museum
73-50 Little Neck Parkway
(Queens)
Floral Park, NY
Open daily year-round.
10:00 am – 5:00 pm.
FREE
Online: queensfarm.org

Pumpkin Patch
Saturdays and Sundays – through Oct 28
11:00 am – 4:30 pm
FREE Admission (except Sunday, Oct 28).
Pay for pumpkin by the size.

Corn Maze
Saturdays and Sundays – through October 28
11:00 am – 4:30 pm
$9 adults/$5 kids 4-11/FREE kids 3 and under

Children’s Fall Festival 
Sunday, Oct 28
11:00 am – 4:00 pm
$5/person, $3/animal feeding, $3 pony ride, $2 hayride, $4/haunted house

Other Pumpkin Patches Worth the Drive (or Train Ride):

The First Annual Brooklyn’s Great Pumpkin Patch by Brooklyn Plantology offers thousands of pumpkins for picking and fun events like a hay maze, petting zoo, and live music every weekend in October.  Come visit Saturdays and Sundays 10:00 am-4:00 pm.


Or visit The Haunted Pumpkin Garden at the New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx. There is no patch for picking but hundreds of spooky pumpkin sculptures to check out in the Everett Children’s Adventure Garden along with pumpkin carving workshops and other activities.

Do you stick to the city pumpkin patches or venture to the outer boroughs to grab your pumpkins? Let us know where you pick your pumpkins in the comment section below. 

— Sarah Choi

first two photos courtesy of The Queens County Farm Facebook page; third photo courtesy of Brooklyn Plantology