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Recipes · Guides · Stories
The Wisconsin Farm Stands Blog
Stories from the field, seasonal recipes, county guides, and everything local food in Wisconsin.
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🌱 Guide
March 4, 2026 · 8 min read
How to Find the Best Farm Stands in Wisconsin This Season
What to look for, where to go, and how to get the most out of every visit — a complete guide for Wisconsin farm stand shoppers.
What's Actually in Season at Wisconsin Farm Stands — Month by Month
A complete month-by-month breakdown of what to expect at Wisconsin farm stands from May through October, and why timing your visits makes all the difference.
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Wisconsin Farm Stand Directory
Farm Stands Across Wisconsin
We connect shoppers with local farm stands in every corner of Wisconsin — from the shores of Lake Michigan to the Mississippi River bluffs. Browse by region or county below.
🌽
Fond du Lac County
Sweet corn, tomatoes, dairy farms and roadside stands along Hwy 151.
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🫐
Sheboygan County
Blueberries, strawberries, fresh eggs and lakeside farm stands.
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🍎
Dodge County
Apple orchards, pumpkin patches, and autumn harvest stands.
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🥕
Columbia County
Root vegetables, CSA shares, and certified organic farms.
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🌸
Washington County
Cut flowers, u-pick gardens, and specialty produce near Milwaukee.
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🍯
Waukesha County
Local honey, maple syrup, and suburban farm stands.
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🧀
Manitowoc County
Dairy, cheese, and coastal farms along Lake Michigan.
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🍓
Racine County
Strawberries, mixed produce, and family farm markets.
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🌾
Adams County
Sandy soil farms, potatoes, and rural roadside stands.
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🫐
Ashland County
Wild berries, local produce, and Lake Superior shoreline farms.
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🥔
Barron County
Potatoes, dairy, and farm fresh produce in northwest Wisconsin.
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🍎
Bayfield County
Famous Bayfield apples, berries, and Apostle Islands area farms.
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🥬
Brown County
Green Bay area farms with fresh vegetables and specialty goods.
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🌽
Buffalo County
Mississippi River bluff farms with sweet corn and produce.
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🍓
Burnett County
Wild cranberries, blueberries, and northwoods farm stands.
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🌻
Calumet County
Lake Winnebago area farms with sunflowers and fresh produce.
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🥕
Chippewa County
Family farms with vegetables, honey, and seasonal produce.
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🥛
Clark County
Dairy country with farm fresh eggs, cheese, and produce.
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🍏
Crawford County
Driftless area orchards, berries, and scenic farm stands.
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🥦
Dane County
Madison area's thriving farm scene — organic, CSA, and specialty produce.
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🍒
Door County
Famous cherries, apples, lavender, and peninsula farm stands.
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🫙
Douglas County
Superior area farms with preserved goods and local produce.
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🌿
Dunn County
Organic farms, herbs, and Chippewa Valley fresh produce.
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🍞
Eau Claire County
Bakeries, fresh produce, and artisan farm goods in the Chippewa Valley.
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🍄
Florence County
Northwoods foraging, mushrooms, and wild harvest goods.
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🌲
Forest County
Wild rice, maple syrup, and northwoods farm products.
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🍏
Grant County
Southwest Wisconsin orchards, produce, and Mississippi River farms.
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🧀
Green County
Swiss cheese country with dairy farms and artisan products.
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🎣
Green Lake County
Lake country farms with fresh produce and seasonal goods.
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🌱
Iowa County
Driftless hills with organic farms and artisan food producers.
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🫐
Iron County
Wild berries, maple syrup, and northwoods farm products.
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🥕
Jackson County
Central Wisconsin farms with vegetables and specialty crops.
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🍅
Jefferson County
Rich farmland with tomatoes, sweet corn, and u-pick operations.
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🌽
Juneau County
Central sands region with potatoes, cranberries, and farm stands.
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🍓
Kenosha County
Southeast Wisconsin farms with berries, vegetables, and orchards.
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🥛
Kewaunee County
Door Peninsula dairy farms and Lake Michigan shoreline stands.
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🌸
La Crosse County
Bluff country farms with flowers, produce, and Mississippi River views.
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🧀
Lafayette County
Driftless dairy and artisan cheese country in southwest Wisconsin.
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🍄
Langlade County
Northwoods farms, wild foraging, and seasonal produce.
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🫙
Lincoln County
Tomahawk area farms with preserved goods and local produce.
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🥕
Marathon County
Wausau area farms with ginseng, vegetables, and specialty crops.
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🍓
Marinette County
Northeast Wisconsin wild berries and river valley farm stands.
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🌽
Marquette County
Central Wisconsin sandy soil farms and roadside produce stands.
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🌲
Menominee County
Wild rice, maple syrup, and native woodland farm products.
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🥬
Milwaukee County
Urban farms, community gardens, and local food producers.
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🧀
Monroe County
Sparta area dairy farms and Driftless region specialty producers.
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🍎
Oconto County
Northeast Wisconsin orchards, berries, and farm fresh goods.
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🫐
Oneida County
Rhinelander area wild berries, honey, and northwoods producers.
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🌻
Outagamie County
Appleton area farms with sunflowers, sweet corn, and fresh produce.
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🌸
Ozaukee County
North shore farms with flowers, herbs, and Lake Michigan fresh air.
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🍏
Pepin County
Lake Pepin bluff farms with apples, berries, and scenic stands.
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🥕
Pierce County
St. Croix River valley farms with fresh produce and specialty goods.
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🫐
Polk County
St. Croix Falls area farms with blueberries and local produce.
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🌽
Portage County
Stevens Point area farms with vegetables, herbs, and organic goods.
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🍄
Price County
Phillips area wild mushrooms, berries, and northwoods goods.
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🍏
Richland County
Driftless orchards, cider, and hillside farm stands.
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🥦
Rock County
Janesville area rich farmland with vegetables and u-pick farms.
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🌿
Rusk County
Ladysmith area farms with wild rice, berries, and local produce.
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🍇
Sauk County
Baraboo area vineyards, orchards, and Wisconsin Dells farm stands.
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🫐
Sawyer County
Hayward area wild berries, wild rice, and northwoods producers.
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🌽
Shawano County
Menominee River valley farms with sweet corn and fresh produce.
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🍓
St. Croix County
Hudson area farms with strawberries, sweet corn, and local goods.
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🍯
Taylor County
Medford area honey, maple syrup, and northwoods farm products.
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🌽
Trempealeau County
Mississippi River bluff farms with sweet corn and specialty produce.
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🌿
Vernon County
Organic Driftless farming with diverse vegetables and artisan goods.
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🫐
Vilas County
Northwoods lake country with wild berries and seasonal stands.
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🍓
Walworth County
Lake Geneva area u-pick farms, orchards, and roadside stands.
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🫐
Washburn County
Shell Lake area wild blueberries, cranberries, and local farms.
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🎃
Waupaca County
Chain O'Lakes area pumpkins, apples, and autumn farm stands.
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🥔
Waushara County
Central sands potatoes, vegetables, and roadside farm stands.
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🌻
Winnebago County
Oshkosh area farms with sunflowers, sweet corn, and fresh produce.
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🌽
Wood County
Marshfield and Wisconsin Rapids area farms with fresh produce.
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Our Story
About Wisconsin Farm Stands
A free, independent directory built by Wisconsin locals who believe every farmer deserves to be found — and every family deserves access to fresh, local food.
Why We Built This
Wisconsin has hundreds of incredible farm stands — small family operations growing sweet corn, honey, flowers, eggs, and more. But most of them had no way to be found online. They relied on handmade signs, word of mouth, and hope that someone driving by would stop.
We built Wisconsin Farm Stands to change that. A free, easy-to-use map and directory that puts every local farm stand in front of the people looking for them — no technical skills required for farmers, no subscription required for shoppers.
Our Mission
Keep local food local. Every farm stand listing on our map is free, forever. We believe small farms are the backbone of Wisconsin's food system, and they shouldn't have to pay to be discovered by the neighbors who would love to buy from them.
How It Works
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Farmers list their stand — free, in under 5 minutes. Add your location, hours, and what you sell.
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Shoppers search the map — by location, produce type, or county. Results update in real time.
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Wisconsin First, Always
We're based in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. This isn't a national platform that treats Wisconsin as an afterthought — it's a Wisconsin-specific directory built for Wisconsin farmers and Wisconsin shoppers. Every feature we add starts with the question: does this help a Wisconsin farm stand succeed?
The Weekly Harvest newsletter goes out every Friday with what's in season, which stands to visit, and updates from around the state. It's free, it's local, and it's written by people who actually drive these county roads.
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Common Questions
How do I list my farm stand? +
Click "List My Stand Free" anywhere on the site. It's completely free and takes under 5 minutes. Your stand appears on the map immediately after review.
How do I update my listing? +
Premium members can update their listing anytime from the dashboard. Free listings can be updated by contacting us — just include your farm name and what needs changing.
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Yes — 100% free, always. We offer a paid Premium tier with extra features, but the basic map listing is free forever. No credit card, no trial, no catch.
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All 72 Wisconsin counties. We're adding stands in every county every season. If your county looks sparse, list your stand and help us grow it!
Wisconsin Farm Stand Directory
Find a Local Farm Stand
Browse every farm stand in Wisconsin — filter by county, produce type, day of week, and more.
Wisconsin Farm Stands ("we," "us," or "our") operates wifarmstands.com. This policy explains what information we collect, how we use it, and your rights.
Information we collect
When you subscribe to The Weekly Harvest, we collect your email address. When you submit a farm stand listing, we collect the information you provide including farm name, location, hours, and contact details. We do not collect payment information directly — all payments are handled by Stripe.
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Email addresses are used only to send The Weekly Harvest newsletter, which you can unsubscribe from at any time. Farm stand information you submit is displayed publicly on this website. We do not sell your information to third parties.
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Questions about this policy? Use the contact form on our Contact page.
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Last updated: March 2026
By using wifarmstands.com you agree to these terms. If you do not agree, please do not use the site.
Using the directory
Wisconsin Farm Stands is a directory of farm stands. We do not operate any of the stands listed and are not responsible for their accuracy, hours, availability, or products. Always verify directly with the stand before visiting.
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By submitting a listing you confirm that you operate the farm stand and that the information you provide is accurate. You agree not to submit false, misleading, or fraudulent information. We reserve the right to remove any listing at our discretion.
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Questions? Use the contact form on our Contact page.
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How to Find the Best Farm Stands in Wisconsin This Season
🌽
🌱 Guide · March 4, 2026 · 8 min read
There's a particular kind of satisfaction that comes from pulling off a county road, spotting a hand-painted sign, and discovering a farm stand you never knew existed. Wisconsin has hundreds of them — tucked behind barns, set up along state highways, or operating right out of a family's front yard. But not all farm stands are created equal, and finding the great ones takes a little know-how.
1. Go where the soil is right
Wisconsin's geography is wildly varied, and what grows well depends heavily on where you are. The Kettle Moraine region in the east — Fond du Lac, Washington, and Dodge counties — has rich loam soil that produces exceptional sweet corn, heirloom tomatoes, and root vegetables. The Driftless Area in the southwest, with its steep valleys and unusual microclimate, is known for specialty crops, honey, and small-batch maple syrup you won't find anywhere else. If you're chasing strawberries, head north toward the sandy soils of Portage and Waushara County where the drainage is perfect. Knowing the region tells you what to expect.
2. Timing is everything
Wisconsin's growing season is compressed — roughly May through October, with peak variety happening in July and August. But the best farm stands operate on a weekly rhythm you can learn. Sweet corn tends to arrive mid-July and lasts maybe six weeks. Strawberries have an even shorter window, sometimes as little as three weeks in June. Heirloom tomatoes peak in August. Apples and pumpkins define September and October. The stands that update their listings regularly — telling you what's available this week, not last month — are the ones worth visiting again and again.
3. Honor system stands deserve special attention
Some of the best farm stands in Wisconsin are completely unmanned — a table, some vegetables, a price list, and a tin can or Venmo sign. The honor system is genuinely common in rural Wisconsin, and these stands often have the freshest product because they're stocked directly from the field with no middleman. They also tend to be priced lower than attended stands. Look for the 🤝 Honor System filter on this site to find them near you.
4. Talk to the farmer
When there's someone at the stand, ask questions. What's coming in next week? What variety of tomato is that? Do you do a CSA? Wisconsin farmers are generally chatty and proud of what they grow. You'll often leave with a tip about a nearby stand you didn't know about, a recipe suggestion, or an invitation to come back when the peppers peak. Some of the best customer relationships in local agriculture start with a simple conversation at a roadside stand.
5. Bring cash and a cooler
Many Wisconsin farm stands still run cash-only, especially the smaller operations. EBT acceptance is growing — look for the 💳 badge on this site — but it's not universal yet. A small cooler in your car transforms a farm stand visit. Eggs, honey, fresh cheese, cut flowers, sweet corn — all of it travels better cold, and you can stop at multiple stands without worrying about produce wilting in a hot car.
Ready to find a stand?
Use the map or directory to find farm stands near you — filter by what's open today, what they sell, or whether they accept EBT.
Wisconsin Honey: Why Local Is Worth Every Penny
🍯
🍯 Spotlight · February 6, 2026 · 6 min read
Pick up a jar of Wisconsin wildflower honey and hold it up to the light. Depending on the season and the region it came from, it might be pale gold, amber, or so dark it's nearly brown. That variation isn't a defect — it's the whole point. Local honey is a snapshot of a specific landscape at a specific moment in time, and no two jars from two different farms are exactly the same.
What makes Wisconsin honey different
Wisconsin has a remarkable diversity of flowering plants across its different regions, and bees are generous foragers. Clover-dominant honey from the central plains is light and sweet — the closest to what most people picture when they think of honey. Wildflower blends from the Northwoods carry hints of basswood, which gives them a slightly minty, herbal quality. And buckwheat honey from the Driftless Area is something else entirely — dark, almost molasses-thick, with a bold flavor that stands up to strong cheese and hearty bread in a way lighter honeys simply can't.
Raw vs. filtered — what to look for
Most commercial honey is heavily filtered and heat-processed to give it a uniform appearance and prevent crystallization. This processing strips out pollen, propolis, and many of the compounds that give honey its health properties. Raw honey from a local beekeeper is minimally processed — sometimes strained through cheesecloth and that's it. It may crystallize over time (that's normal and easy to fix with gentle warming), and it will taste more complex and interesting than anything from a grocery store shelf.
Seasonal honeys worth seeking out
Spring honey, harvested early in the season from fruit tree blossoms and early wildflowers, tends to be light and delicate. Summer honey — the most common variety — picks up clover and a mix of whatever is blooming in July and August. Fall honey is the richest and most complex, often with stronger floral and earthy notes. Some Wisconsin beekeepers offer all three as separate harvests, letting you taste how the same hives change through the year.
How to use it
Drizzle light clover honey over fresh ricotta and toast. Use buckwheat honey in marinades for grilled pork or chicken — its intensity holds up to heat and acid in a way delicate honeys don't. Stir wildflower honey into plain yogurt with a handful of berries you picked yourself from a Wisconsin u-pick stand. Or just eat it off the spoon. There's no wrong answer with good local honey.
Find honey near you
Use the produce filter to find Wisconsin farm stands selling local honey in your county.
The Wisconsin U-Pick Guide: Everything You Need to Know
🍓
🍓 U-Pick Guide · January 9, 2026 · 7 min read
U-pick farming is one of those Wisconsin traditions that gets better every time you do it. There's something genuinely satisfying about picking your own food — you know exactly when it was harvested (just now), you can choose exactly what you want, and you end up with more than you planned because the rows just keep going and the berries just keep looking perfect. Wisconsin has excellent u-pick options from late spring through fall, and knowing what to expect at each makes the whole experience better.
Strawberries — June
Strawberry season is Wisconsin's most anticipated u-pick window — and one of the shortest. It typically opens in early to mid-June and closes within three to four weeks, sometimes faster if the weather is warm. Call ahead or check the stand's listing the morning you plan to go, because a hot week can bring a field from peak to finished in just a few days. Bring your own containers if you plan to make jam — most farms sell quarts for fresh eating but discount if you bring buckets for larger quantities. Pick in the morning before the berries warm up.
Blueberries — July through August
Blueberry picking is more forgiving than strawberries — the season runs longer and the berries hold on the bush better. Wisconsin's acidic sandy soils in the central and northern parts of the state are ideal for blueberries, so that's where most u-pick operations concentrate. A good patch of ripe blueberries will have you filling a container faster than you expect. Check for the blue-black color all the way around — a pink or reddish base means it needs a few more days.
Raspberries — July and again in September
Most raspberry varieties produce twice — a summer crop in July and a fall crop in September. The fall harvest is often the more flavorful of the two, with cooler temperatures concentrating the sugars. Raspberries are fragile and don't travel well, so u-pick is one of the best ways to get truly fresh ones. Pick gently — they pull off the stem with almost no force when ripe, and bruise easily. Don't overfill your container or the bottom layer turns to mush.
Apples — September and October
Apple picking is Wisconsin's fall ritual. Most u-pick orchards open in September with early varieties like Zestar and Honeycrisp, then continue through October with storage apples like Fuji and Cortland. Many orchards pair the picking experience with cider pressing, donuts, and hayrides, making it as much an outing as a grocery run. Check what varieties are ripe before you go — not all apples peak at the same time, and a good orchard website or listing will tell you what's ready this week.
What to bring
Comfortable closed-toe shoes (you're walking through a field), sunscreen, a hat, water, and more containers than you think you'll need. Cash or Venmo for most farms. A cooler if you have berries or tender produce that needs to stay cool on the drive home. And bring the kids if you have them — u-pick is one of the best hands-on food experiences you can give a child.
Find U-Pick near you
Filter by 🍓 U-Pick in the Find Stands page to see every u-pick operation currently listed in Wisconsin.
What's Actually in Season at Wisconsin Farm Stands — Month by Month
📅
🌿 Seasonal · December 5, 2025 · 9 min read
Wisconsin's farm stand season doesn't just start and stop — it transforms month by month, with completely different crops available in May than in September. Understanding what to expect when helps you plan better visits and appreciate why that August tomato tastes so different from a February grocery store one. Here's what's actually happening at Wisconsin farm stands through the season.
May — The season wakes up
Most farm stands open in May, but selection is limited. Look for asparagus (a Wisconsin spring staple), spring onions, radishes, spinach, lettuce, and the first herbs. Rhubarb is everywhere in May and early June — bright, tart, and perfect for pie. Transplant seedlings and bedding flowers are also widely available from farm stands in spring, great if you're starting your own garden.
June — Strawberries and the first rush
June is strawberry month, full stop. The best farm stands in Wisconsin often have a line for u-pick strawberries on opening weekend. Alongside berries, June brings snap peas, broccoli, early cabbage, summer squash, and the first cucumbers. Cut flowers start appearing mid-June — zinnias, sunflowers, and wildflower mixes that look like they came from a professional florist but cost a fraction of the price.
July — Peak summer
July is arguably the best month to visit Wisconsin farm stands. Sweet corn arrives mid-July and the quality from a local field picked that morning is genuinely different from anything at a grocery store. Blueberries, green beans, beets, carrots, peppers, and summer squash are all in full production. Fresh garlic — the just-cured heads with papery skin still bright white — shows up in July and is worth buying in quantity. Basil is at its peak. Tomatoes are arriving, though heirlooms peak a few weeks later.
August — Tomato month
If you're going to make one trip to a Wisconsin farm stand all year, make it in August. Heirloom tomatoes — Cherokee Purple, Brandywine, Green Zebra, Sun Gold cherry — are all at their peak. Sweet corn continues. Raspberries start their summer run. Peppers in every variety you can imagine. Cantaloupe and watermelon appear at stands in the warmer southern counties. Late August also brings the first hints of fall — early apples, winter squash, and the beginning of the pumpkin harvest.
September — The fall harvest
September is a different kind of abundance — heavier, earthier, built for storing. Winter squash (butternut, acorn, delicata, spaghetti) piles up at every stand. Apples are in full harvest. Sweet potatoes. Dried beans. Fall raspberries. Leeks and late-season garlic. Honey from the last summer harvest. Stands that have been operating all season start showcasing the crops that took all summer to grow.
October — The last run
Pumpkins define October at Wisconsin farm stands — for carving, for cooking, and in every size and color imaginable. Apples continue through most of the month. Root vegetables — parsnips, turnips, carrots, celeriac — are at their sweetest after a frost concentrates their sugars. Many stands close by Halloween, though some carry into November with storage crops like squash, potatoes, and onions that keep well and are worth stocking up on.
See what's in season right now
The What's In Season section on the homepage shows what's at peak across Wisconsin this week.
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