Community Corner
Here Are The Best Pumpkin Patches Near You In Connecticut
Pumpkin picking is a great excuse to get the family together ahead of Halloween. Here's where you can find the best pumpkin patches.

It’s that magical time of year again when kids unglue themselves from their tablets and smartphones for just a couple precious hours to join their parents in a jaunt to the local pumpkin patch. Few things excite our youth more than picking out gargantuan gourds, and for parents, it’s the perfect excuse to throw on that new fall sweater, round up the squad and have a stranger snap the perfect Christmas card photo for grandma and grandpa.
Haunted houses get all the attention, but pumpkin patches are the soul of the season. And if you’re looking for the cream of the crop, consider heading over to Foster Farm in South Windsor, ranked the best pumpkin patch in Connecticut by the folks at the women's magazine Good Housekeeping. The patch is open until Oct. 31.
Here’s what the magazine had to say about the pumpkin peddlers:
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"The Foster family has been running Foster Farm since 1790, and while it’s no longer a dairy farm, there’s plenty to do. Weave through a massive corn maze, hop on for a hayride, and find the perfect mum. Tickets for people 13 and older are $10, and kids 4-12 years old are $6."
If that doesn’t suit your fancy — or, more likely, the drive is simply too far — you can also try one of the following places. Whether you’re looking for haunted hayrides and spooky corn mazes, or simply family-friendly bounce houses, petting zoos and pony rides, one of these should do the trick.
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- Fairfield County
- Blue Jay Orchards - Bethel
- Jones Family Farms (Pumpkinseed Hill Farm) - Shelton
- Silverman's Farm - Easton
- Litchfield County
- Angevine Farm - Warren
- Barden Farm - New Hartford
- Ellsworth Hill Orchard and Berry Farm - Sharon
- Harris Hill Farm - New Milford
- Ruwet Farm - Torrington
- New London County
- Country Corners Farm - Griswold
- Grant's - Lisbon
- Scott's Yankee Farmer - East Lyme
- Windham County
- Creamery Brook Bison - Brooklyn
- Horse Listeners Orchard - Ashford
- Hartford County
- Belltown Hill Orchards - South Glastonbury
- Eddy Farm Stand - Newington
- Foster Family Farm - South Windosr
- Johnny's Roadside Market Garden - Enfield
- Karabin Farms - Southington
- Minor's Farm - Bristol
- Rose's Berry Farm - Glastonbury
- Tolland County
- Johnny Appleseed's Farm - Ellington
- Pell Farm - Somers
- Middlesex County
- Peaceful Hill Tree Farm - East Hampton
- Staehly Farms - East Haddam
- New Haven County
- Ives Farm - Cheshire
- Rose Orchards - North Branford
- Shore Line Trolley Museum Pumpkin Patch - East Haven
- Schreibers Farm - Oxford
- Sunflower Farm - Orange
If you’re hoping to find locally grown pumpkins, consider this — while technically grown throughout the country, there’s a 50-50 chance your pumpkin was grown in one of just six states, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. There’s a good chance that state was Illinois, the nation’s largest producer, which harvests up to five times as many pumpkin acres as any other top state at more than 600 million pounds.
Your turn: Send your best and — more importantly — worst pumpkin carvings to rj.scofield@patch.com.
When picking your perfect pumpkin, here are a few tips to keep in mind, according to the folks at Kitchn.
- Know the difference between pumpkins best used for pies and those best for carving. Workers will sometimes label their pumpkins to help you identify which is better for eating and which is better for carving. But if they don’t, remember smaller, thicker and rounder pumpkins are generally better for eating. They have more guts on the inside and are more difficult to saw.
- Tap on your pumpkin. By tapping on your prospective pumpkins, you’ll be able to compare which feel sturdy and sound hollow. The sturdier, the better, and it should sound hollow.
- Flip it upside down and apply pressure. It might sound odd, but trust us, this is key. Turn your pumpkin upside down and press on it with both thumbs. If it’s not sturdy, chances are it’ll rot.
- Always carry it from the bottom. Do not carry your pumpkin by its stem, that’s the easiest way to test whether your pumpkin can defy gravity. So far, gravity remains undefeated.
- Wait to carve your pumpkin. Ask anyone what happens if you carve too early and you’ll hear one of two answers, neither of them good. Either the pumpkin rots before Halloween or it simply becomes dinner for a family of hungry animals.
Patch national staffer Dan Hampton contributed to this report.
Photo credit: David Allen/Patch
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