Seasonal & Holidays
Where To Pick Pumpkins In Doylestown This Fall
Pumpkin season is here. Find out where to get the pick of the patch near Doylestown.

DOYLESTOWN, PA — Heading out to a patch or field to pick the best or biggest pumpkin isn’t just about finding the perfect Halloween jack-o-lantern. It’s a chance to head out with the family in a cherished fall tradition full of fun activities.
Many pumpkin patches and fields offer complementary activities like hayrides, corn mazes and games for the kids. Picking your own pumpkin also is a good way to support the local farmers who grow them.
Whether you plan to carve a jack-o’-lantern or just add some festive flair to your stoop, there are plenty of places to pick up a pumpkin near Doylestown. Here are a few of our favorites:
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- Bountiful Acres, 5074 York Road, Holicong 18928. October weekends at Bountiful Acres are filled with fall family fun activities including navigate the corn maze, pick your own pumpkin, hayrides on Big Red, and more. There is an admission fee.
- None Such Farm, 4493 York Road, Buckingham. During four weekends in October, None Such Farm transforms a grass field in the middle of a pick-your-own pumpkin patch into a festival. Good food, music, and family-style fun.
- Hellerick's Farm and Garden Center, 5500 North Easton Road, Doylestown. A fall festival features a variety of activities, including pumpkins, hayrides, corn mazes and more.
- AGA Farms, 1333 Elephant Road, Perkasie. The farm is open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily (weather permitting) throughout the fall season with a selection of pumpkins, gourds, corn shocks, straw bales, and other fall decorations. A hayride will take visitors on a tour of the 100-acre property.
- Rustic Valley Orchards and Tabora Farm, 1104 Upper Stump Road, Chalfont. On weekends in October, families can take wagon rides down to pick the perfect pumpkin.
- Eastburn Pumpkin Patch, 1085 Durham Road, Pineville. Small, family-owned pumpkin patch offering a variety of pumpkins and gourds in October.
- Winding Brook Farm, 3041 Bristol Road, Warrington. During the month of October, celebrate the fall season with us. The farm has a corn maze, hay maze, pumpkin patch , and hayrides.
Keep in mind that carving and baking pumpkins aren’t the same. The former are grown in fields to be large, more vibrant in color and relatively hollow. The watery flesh doesn’t have the same flavor as baking pumpkins, which tend to be smaller, have thicker, harder-to-carve walls and sweeter flesh. For those, you’ll probably need to head to the grocery store.
If your pumpkin is destined for a starring role on Halloween night, here are some tips for carving a perfect jack-o’-lantern. Warren Nash on YouTube also shows a step-by-step process to make the perfect carve.
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Pumpkin carving kits will go a long way in getting what you need. They typically include saws, a scooper, a drill and multiple patterns.
If you're looking for the items individually around the house, here's what you could use:
- Pumpkin. Unless you have a pumpkin-growing operation in the backyard, you'll need to pick out one you like from your local pumpkin patch or a store. Make sure it looks sturdy and clean. Remember, this is the pumpkin that will be front and center on the porch for the Halloween season.
- Curved boning knife, or serrated knife from the kitchen.
- Ice cream scoop or scraper
- Paper
- Pencil or pen
- Candle or battery-operated light
- Lighter
Steps
- Cut it: If cutting from the top of the pumpkin, make sure to do it on an inward angle, so the top won't drop inside the pumpkin when you put it back on. Michael Natiello, creative director for The Great Jack-o'-Lantern Blaze, said it's better to cut the pumpkin from the bottom, in a series of pumpkin carving tips from Good Housekeeping. That helps prevent the sides from caving in later.
- Gut it: Use the ice cream scoop, or your hands, to remove all the seeds and other debris from inside the pumpkin. Do a thorough cleaning and make sure nothing is left sticking to the sides.
- Trace it: Draw your design on a piece of paper before putting it on the pumpkin itself. That way, it is easier to trace the design onto the pumpkin.
- Make the cuts: Cut out the design. Natiello said to use a fork or pencil to poke holes around the lines. When cutting, get the big pieces of pumpkin out first and clean up the edges later.
- Light it: Light the pumpkin with a battery-operated light or candle in a holder, place it in the pumpkin then admire your work.
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