Fifteen minutes from Hobart Airport, the road to Sorell drops you into a working landscape of orchard rows, vines and grazing paddocks, with the water of Iron Creek Bay glinting somewhere beyond the fruit trees. This is Iron Creek Bay Estate, a rural property that has built itself around what the ground actually produces — cherries first, then apricots, apples, pears and plums, ripening in succession from around mid-December through to late February. A harvest calendar tracks what's ready on any given visit, since a summer estate like this shifts week to week: stone fruit giving way to pip fruit, the cherry trees stripped bare well before the last plums come off.
Picking here is unhurried and self-directed — you walk into the rows, choose your own fruit, and pay for what you take, with the option to simply wander the orchard as much as to fill a punnet. The setting does a lot of the work: this is southern Tasmanian farmland proper, with the vineyard running alongside the orchard blocks and views that open out toward Mount Wellington in the distance. It's the kind of place that rewards slowing down rather than ticking off a basket quota.
There's reason to linger beyond the picking, too. ORANI, the estate's restaurant, looks straight across the cherry orchard to the bay, serving breakfast and lunch daily and dinner seasonally, built on the same farm-grown produce and matched with Tasmanian wine and spirits. Pavilion rooms and simpler pod rooms mean a day trip can easily stretch into an overnight stay, making Iron Creek Bay less a pick-your-own stop than a small rural escape — close enough to Hobart for an afternoon, worth staying for anyway.