2024 South Ottawa, Ontario Apple U-Pick Farms and Orchards - PickYourOwn.org
Find a pick-your-own farm near you! Then learn to can and freeze! Since 2002! We update continuously; Beware the copycat websites!
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Apple U-Pick Orchards in South Ottawa, Ontario in 2024, by county
Below are the U-Pick orchards and farms for apples that we know of in this area.
Not all areas of a province or region have apples orchards that are open to the public. If you know of any others, please tell us using the add a farm form!
Remember to always check with the farm's own website or Facebook page before you go - or call or email them if they don't have a website or Facebook page. Conditions at the farms and crops can change literally overnight, so if you want to avoid a wasted trip out there - check with the farm directly before you go! If I cannot reach them, I DON'T GO!
PLEASE report closed farms, broken links and incorrect info using the "Report Corrections" form below.
New! Road tripping and camping is a great way to have a fun, safe and inexpensive
family trip. The national and state parks and monuments are open, and campgrounds usually cost between $10 and $40 per night. September to November is the best
camping weather. See our new website Road Tripping and Camping.com for tips, tricks,
guides, checklists and info about parks, monuments and other places to visit.
New! We just went live with our latest website,
FunFactoryTours.com - As they name implies, you can find a fun factory tour, including chocolate, automobiles, historical forts and sites, famous buildings,
Active Federal facilities even fun geology: like fossils and volcanic areas
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Leeds and Grenville (Athens, Brockville, Elgin, Kemptville, Lansdowne, Odgensburg)
Halls Apple Market - apples 2930 2nd Concession Rd, Brockville, ON K6V 5T1. Phone: 613-342-6320. Email: info@hallsapplemarket.com. Open: Store Hours: Monday to Saturday from 8 am to 5:30 pm All Year And Sundays April 1 to Christmas Day. Directions: GPS Coordinates are N44 degrees 37\'59.26″ W75 degrees 39\'22.98″; From Ottawa: Take the 416 South to the 401 West. Take the Maitland Rd. Exit #705. Turn left \(west\) onto 2nd Concession at the end of the off-ramp. Go 3km and look for the farm on the right. Pick Your Own apples is available from mid August until picking is finished in October. Bring your camera and a picnic lunch as we have picnic tables and a childrens playground. . Click here for a map and directions. Halls Apple Market Facebook page. i GPS Coordinates are N44 degrees 37'59.26″ W75 degrees 39'22.98″; From Ottawa: Take the 416 South to the 401 West. Take the Maitland Rd. Exit #705. Turn left (west) onto 2nd Concession at the end of the off-ramp. Go 3km and look for the farm on the right. Pick Your Own is available from mid August until picking is finished in October. Bring your camera and a picnic lunch as we have picnic tables and a childrens playgroundTypical Harvest Timing of : August September October Yellow Transparent McIntosh Empire Melba Cortland Red Delicious Paula Red Royal Gala Golden Russet Jersey Mac Snow Northern Spy Lobo Honey Crisp Tolman Sweets Sunrise Spartan Bancroft Crab Clapps Pears Crispin Eenie Pears Flemish Pears Ida Red Tour buses and School Buses are welcome, there is ample parking. Please call ahead for information about guided tours of our working apple farm. (ADDED: July 02, 2018, JBS)
Ottawa (South Ottawa)
Log Cabin Orchard - apples, pumpkins, hayrides, we also have pie pumpkins 6121 Cabin Road, Osgoode, ON . Phone: 613-826-5081. Email: yazmin@LogCabinOrchard.ca. Open: Monday to Friday from 9am to 6pm and Saturday and Sunday from 9 am to dark. Click here for a map and directions. The Cabin, for which the property is named, was the original homestead of Clarke Moses, an Irish immigrant who settled the farm in the early 1800's. The now serves as a unique shop offering country gifts, baked goods, jams & jellies, home made frozen meals, farm fresh apples and produce. In the Cabin you find a wonderful little craft shop decked out with Christmas ideas, warm apple cider on the cook stove and fresh out from the oven apple pies. Our One Acre Pick your Own Pumpkin with Jack o Lanterns, Pie Pumpkins, Specialty Pumpkins & Gourds. Free Parking, Free Wagon Hay Rides! The perfect spot for your Fall Family Photos. Our farm shop is open daily all year long and No Admission Fee makes the Log Cabin Apple Orchard a great way to spend the day picking apples.
Apple
Apple Picking Tips, Recipes and Information
Apples ripen from the outside of the tree towards the center, so the apples out
the outside of the tree will ripen first. Once they are picked, they stop
ripening. Picking apples directly from a
tree is easy. Roll the apple upwards off the branch and give a little twist;
don't pull straight away from the tree. If two apples are joined together at the
top, both will come away at the same time. Don't shake the trees or branches.
If the apple you are trying to pick drops, (or others on the tree) go ahead and
pick it up. They're perfectly fine! But do wash them before you eat them! More info: How to tell
when apples are ripe
Once picked, don't throw the apples into the baskets, place them in
gently, or they will bruise and go bad more quickly.
Don't wash apples until just before using to prevent spoilage.
Keep apples cool after picking to increase shelf life. A cool basement is ideal, but the fruit/vegetable drawer of a refrigerator will work, too. A refrigerator is fine for small
quantities of apples. Boxed apples need to be kept in a cool, dark spot
where they won't freeze. Freezing ruptures all of an apple's cells, turning
it into one large bruise overnight. The usual solution is to store apples in
a root cellar. But root cellars often have potatoes in them: apples and
potatoes should never be stored in the same room because, as they age,
potatoes release an otherwise ethylene gas, which makes apples spoil faster.
If you can keep the gas away from your apples, they will keep just fine.
Just don't store them right next to potatoes.
Prevent contact between apples stored for the winter by wrapping them
individually in sheets of newspaper. The easiest way to do this is to unfold
a section of newspaper all the way and tear it into quarters. Then stack the
wrapped apples. See more here: How
to store apples at home
There are tens of thousands of varieties of apples, developed over centuries. They vary in sugar, acoidity, flavors, storing, crispness and many other
attributes. See our guides to apple varieties:
Recipes, illustrated with step by step instructions
Apple pie recipe and directions and
illustrated! I can say, with, ahem, no bias at all, that this is the
best apple pie recipe in the world! (Alright, I did have an apple strudel in
Vienna once at that place listed in Fodors that was REALLY good, but that
wasn't a pie, was it? And since this was the recipe my grandmother used, it
must be great!)