Ten minutes inland from Port Macquarie, past the point where the Hastings River bends toward the sea, Ricardoes Tomatoes & Strawberries runs its picking rows under glass rather than open sky. It's a hydroponic operation, which sounds clinical until you're standing inside one of the covered greenhouses watching strawberries hang at shoulder height on vertical frames — no crouching, no muddy knees, no need to check the forecast. Because everything grows under cover, picking here isn't seasonal in the usual sense; it happens rain or shine, every day of the week, which on the mid-north coast's changeable weather is no small thing.
The pleasure is in the ease of it. You walk the rows, basket in hand, plucking berries at eye level, and the tomatoes get the same undercover treatment nearby. Afterwards there's Cafe Red, air-conditioned against the coastal humidity, where the scones have their own local reputation, and a farm shop stacked with the outputs of the harvest turned into jams and relishes — strawberry, fig, tomato and chilli, tomato and passionfruit, a grandfather's-recipe relish among them. It's the kind of shelf that rewards browsing rather than a quick grab on the way out. For those who want the fuller picture of how a greenhouse strawberry actually gets to a punnet, free tours run on weekday mornings, no bookings needed.
Entry itself costs nothing, which keeps the gate open to families killing an hour, grey nomads detouring off the highway, and repeat locals alike — and it's earned a reputation, backed by a shelf of tourism awards, as one of the must-do stops on this stretch of the coast. There's no pretence about it: sealed roads in, sealed parking, a straightforward loop of pick, eat, shop. It's a farm built for visiting on a whim, whatever the sky is doing.
