Harvest the Fleurieu
About 50 minutes south of Adelaide, where the Fleurieu Peninsula's dairy country gives way to rolling paddocks, Harvest the Fleurieu turns a working strawberry patch into a proper family outing. The Sherry family have farmed this ground for three generations, and it shows in the unhurried way the place runs — you're handed a punnet, pointed toward the rows, and left to wander the patch for about an hour, plucking berries at your own pace rather than being marched through on a schedule. The season runs from early October through to autumn, after which the patch closes down entirely and rests until the following spring; it's worth checking ahead during peak weekends, when families from Adelaide make the drive down in numbers. Entry is modest — a few dollars for adults, less for children, nothing for the very young — with strawberries themselves sold by the kilo once you've filled your container. What lifts the visit beyond a simple pick is what waits back at the sheds: a market hall stocked with produce and artisanal goods from more than eighty South Australian suppliers, and a café turning out house-made pies, pasties, sausage rolls and cakes, including a dedicated gluten-free kitchen run by two in-house pastry chefs. It's the kind of setup that rewards lingering — a coffee and a slice of something after the picking is done, rather than a quick dash back to the car. There's a rhythm to it that regulars clearly appreciate, returning each October as the new season's berries ripen. The appeal isn't complicated: sun-warmed strawberries eaten straight from the row, a bit of paddock underfoot, and a café worth the drive on its own merits. For a Fleurieu day trip that doesn't need dressing up, this is close to the real thing — produce grown, picked and sold within sight of where it was planted.