The road into Canoelands winds through Hawkesbury country that still feels like a step out of Sydney's orbit — folded hills, dry creek lines, the kind of quiet that makes a working orchard feel like a discovery rather than a destination. The Christie family has worked this ground since 1923, and that century of continuity shows less in any grand gesture than in the unfussed rhythm of the place: rows planted for picking, not for show, and a farm that has clearly settled into its own patterns of work and season.
The main event runs from mid-October to late December, when the stone fruit comes on hard — nectarines, peaches and plums ripening in close succession — alongside blueberries and strawberries low in the rows. It's a short, generous window, the kind that rewards checking in rather than assuming last month's fruit is this month's. Beyond it, the orchard keeps turning: apples through the cooler months, figs softening in late summer, persimmons and pomegranates carrying colour into autumn, citrus holding the orchard together through winter. It's less a pick-your-own stop than a year-round orchard that happens to open its rows to the public at their sweetest moments.
Picking here comes with the trimmings that make it a proper family outing rather than a quick punnet-fill: tractor rides through the property, animals to feed, picnic tables set under whatever shade is going, and a café for the inevitable coffee once the baskets are full. It's unpretentious, close enough to Sydney for a half-day trip, and shaped by a family who've clearly spent long enough on this soil to know exactly when the fruit is ready to be picked.
Nearby on Australian Atlas
View on full map →More in Sydney
Own Canoelands Orchard?
Claim your free listing to update your details and connect with visitors.
Claim this listing