Pick Your Own Daffodils — Spring Flower Picking

- Pick-your-own daffodils and spring blooms at participating Connecticut farms and gardens. - When: This weekend and through late April (week of April 19–25, 2026). - Details: ctvisit.com

Connecticut’s spring flower-picking season is open now, with daffodil fields and other blooms drawing visitors through late April. (ctvisit.com) The state tourism site is featuring pick-your-own daffodils as a weekend outing for the week of April 19–25, 2026, alongside other spring events across Connecticut. (ctvisit.com) One of the clearest options is Dancing Daffodils at Halfinger Farms in Higganum, listed by CTvisit as running from April 1 to April 30, 2026. The event page says visitors can pick from more than 100,000 flowers. (ctvisit.com) Halfinger Farms says the daffodils are 75 cents each and asks visitors to call 860-345-4609 for the daily picking report before traveling. The farm also says picking runs daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in season, weather permitting. (ctvisit.com) (halfingerfarms.com) The timing is narrow because daffodils are an early spring crop, and Connecticut’s tourism calendar is steering visitors to fields while the bloom window is still open in April. CTvisit’s statewide events listings show Dancing Daffodils continuing into early May listings, while the farm’s own site says April is the key month for pick-your-own daffodils. (ctvisit.com) (halfingerfarms.com) Halfinger Farms describes Dancing Daffodils as Connecticut’s first pick-your-own daffodil farm. Fox61 reported this month that owner Jen Halfinger has opened the property for the event for the past six years and that the 12-acre farm has about 150,000 daffodils this time of year. (ctvisit.com) (fox61.com) The farm’s rules are specific: pets are not permitted at the daffodil farm, picnics are allowed, and visitors are asked to take their trash home. Those details matter on a rural road where the farm also asks drivers to slow down to protect neighbors. (halfingerfarms.com) For travelers, the practical advice is simple: check the bloom report before you go, expect an outdoor field visit rather than a formal garden, and make the trip before April ends. Connecticut’s spring flower season is here, but the daffodil window is short. (halfingerfarms.com) (ctvisit.com)

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