Find a local pick your own farm here!

Blueberry U-Pick Orchards in Wales in 2024, by county

Blueberries Below are the PYO orchards and farms for blueberries that we know of in this area. Not all areas have blueberries orchards or farms 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.

Walesl fruit picking season chart.

A typical harvest calendar for Wales is at right.

Anglesey

Clwyd (Conwy, Denbighshire, Flintshire, Wrexham)

Dyfed (Carmarthenshire, Ceredigion, Pembrokeshire)

  • Penlanlas Farm - Follows organic practices, currants (red and black), gooseberries, other berries, raspberries (red), strawberries, tayberries,
    Penlanlas Rhydyfelin, Aberystwyth, SY23 4QE. Phone: 01970 625319. Email: iinfo@penlanlas.co.uk. Open: UPDATE for 2018, Their website is gone; Their Facebook page hasn't been updated since 2011. Does anyone have current information, are they still offering pick your own or are even open? If so, please write me, their last reported hours were May - September 10am to 7pm daily; October - April 10am to 4pm daily. Directions: Click here for a map and directions. Penlanlas has 5 acres dedicated to the growing of a range of soft fruit for you to Pick Your Own; Our polytunnels house a 1 metre high “Table-Top System”, taking the hard work out of strawberry picking! The Raspberries are also grown in polytunnels; Please phone for specific opening dates;. We follow organic practices, but are not seeking certification. Payment: Cash, Cheque, Debit cards, Visa/MasterCard. We grow jostaberries, which are a cross between a blackcurrant and a gooseberry. Ready picked Blueberries are available. Award Winning Penlanlas Farm, Nature Trail, PYO Fruit Farm, Golf Course, Conservation… Visit our farm Penlanlas adopts environmentally responsible methods when it comes to managing our land, helping maintain a nature diverse landscape and providing a great resource for our visitors to explore. Play Golf at Penlanlas Together with the peace and tranquillity of the surroundings, this 9-hole, 4119 yards, PAR 62 course provides challenging golf for all abilities. Green fees offer excellent value for money and all players are welcome. Click here for a link to our Facebook page. (UPDATED: August 15, 2010)

Gwent (Blaenau Gwent, Caerphilly, Monmouthshire, Newport, Torfaen)

Gwynedd

Mid Glamorgan (Bridgend, Merthyr Tydfil, Rhondda Cynon Taf)

South Glamorgan (Cardiff, Vale of Glamorgan)

  • The Fruit Garden - PYO: Blackberries, jostaberries, tummelberries, strawberries, raspberries, black & redcurrants,
    Groesfaen Road, Peterston-Super-Ely, Cardiff, S Glamorgan. Phone: 01446 760358. Directions: At Peterston Super Ely off J34 on M4, or A48 at 'Five Mile Lane', 'Sycamore Cross'. Small farm with 2.5 acres of covered, table top strawberries, potted cane raspberries, blueberries; currants, gooseberries, tayberries, tummelberries, blackberries, jostaberries - all superb quality. Luxury ice cream made on the farm. Attends farmers' markets. Also, asparagus (not PYO). Please remember we work with the seasons and our crops are dependent on the weather. Please call to see what is available to pick.The farm shop has home-made ice cream, soft fruits, free range eggs, honey. Also called Wild Fig Farm, they make ice cream, too. (UPDATED: 21 May 2019, JBS)

West Glamorgan (Neath Port Talbot, Swansea)

Powys

 

Blueberry Picking Tips, Recipes and InformationBlueberries

 

Blueberries are one of the easiest fruit to prepare and serve. There's no peeling, pitting, coring or cutting. They have few natural pests, (other than birds), so pesticides are generally unnecessary! This year's crop is fantastic (see related news story), thanks both to the weather and to more farms planting more blueberry bushes due to increased consumer demand over the past few years as more studies proclaim the anti-oxidant and other health properties of blueberries.

Click here to find a local Blueberry Festival (usually held between April and July).

If you are looking for information about a similar berry, the saskatoon (also called the June berry or Serviceberry) see this page about saskatoons.Blueberry field

Picking tips:

Select plump, full blueberries with a light gray-blue color. A berry with any hint of red isn't fully ripened.

Ripening AFTER picking?

First, it is key to know that once picked, blueberries will NOT become any sweeter, nor will the flavor improve. The only change that occurs is the color. They will APPEAR to ripen, but it is only a color change, from white to green to rose to red to pale blue to fully blue. So, white and green colored blueberries will not "ripen" after they are picked; while blueberries that have already turned purple, red or blue-ish usually DO change color after they are picked (if they are kept at room temperature to "ripen").

As the blueberries ripen ON THE BUSH, the flavor goes from tastless to bitter to tasteless tart to tart blueberry flavor to sweet blueberry flavor.

Grocery stores sell blueberries that are tart, not sweet because they had them picked unripe by machine so they are very firm and can handled being bumped around in shipping. They may look good, but are not as tasty as those picked when actually ripe.

Blueberries on a bush

So, the key is, PICK ONLY RIPE BERRIES!

How to pick blueberries

Since blueberries hang on the bushes in bunches a but like grapes do, the easiest and fastest way to pick them is hold your bucket under them in one hand and with your other hand, cup a ripe bunch and gently rub them with your fingers. The ripe berries will drop into your bucket, while the unripe ones will remain attached to the bush.

When the bushes are at peak, I can easily pick 2 gallons per hour (if I'm not being distracted by the kids and the sun isn't too hot!). A newbie might do 1 gallon per hour.and at the beginning or end of the season it takes more time as the berries are not as plentiful nor concentrated in clusters.

Tips for storing blueberries after harvesting:

  • Once picked, don't place the berries, still warm from the sun, in a closed bag or container. Leave the container open so moisture doesn't form in the container.
  • Don't wash berries until just before using, to prevent berries from becoming mushy.
  • Chill berries soon after picking to increase shelf life. Store your fresh blueberries in the refrigerator as soon as you get them home, without washing them, in a covered bowl or storage container. If refrigerated, fresh-picked blueberries will keep 10 to 14 days.
  • Freeze berries in freezer containers without washing to keep the skins from toughening. Place berries one layer deep. Freeze, then pour the frozen berries into freezer containers. Because unwashed blueberries freeze individually, they can be easily poured from containers in desired amounts. Remember both frozen and fresh berries should be rinsed and drained just before serving. Just before using, wash the berries in cold water.

Blueberry Measurements and Conversions

 

Keep in mind that blueberries vary considerably in density and moisture content, so these ranges are approximates.

  • 1 gallon of blueberries weighs about 7.5 lbs or (4 liters of blueberries is about 3.5 kg)freezing blueberries

  • 1 pint of fresh blueberries weights about 3/4 of a pound. (1 liter of blueberries is about 700 grams)

  • 1 pound of fresh blueberries is usually between about 2 and 3 cups of berries.

  • It takes about 4 cups (about of blueberries to make a blueberry pie (see this fantastic and easy blueberry pie recipe)

  • A normal batch of blueberry preserves, jam or jelly requires 5 pints of berries.

  • Blueberries do come in a variety of sizes from small (190-250 berries per cup) to extra large (<90 berries per cup).

Blueberry Recipes, Canning and Freezing Blueberries

Recipesblueberr pie

Canning, freezing and other blueberry recipes:

Baking tips

If you have trouble with blueberries settling to the bottom of muffins and blueberry breads, try one or more of these tips:

  • Coat them with flour before adding to the batter. Just gently shake the blueberries in a bag (plastic or paper) with 1/2 cup of flour, then dump them mix in a sieve to remove excess flour.
  • It may just be that your batter is too thin. try making the batter a little thicker!
  • Fill the muffin cups or baking pan up to 1/4 full with batter (which hasn't had blueberries added to it yet); then stir the blueberries into the remaining batter, and continue to fill the muffin cups or bread pan. The blueberries will start off higher in the mix!