Fall-Festival Passes for Two, Four, or Six at Blake's Big Apple Orchard and Cider Mill (Up to 52% Off)
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Annual fall festival treats families to more than a dozen interactive attractions including a haunted barn, hayrides, and a petting farm
As summer fades, autumn’s beauty emanates from the changing hues of a tree’s leaves and the gradual reddening of a football coach’s face. Revel in the colors of the season with this Groupon.
Choose from Three Options
- $10 for two all-day festival passes (up to a $19.90 value)
- $19 for four all-day festival passes (up to a $39.80 value)
- $29 for six all-day festival passes (up to a $59.70 value)<p>
Admission to the fall festival includes access to more than a dozen attractions, including a 3-D maze, haunted barn, hayrides, giant jumping pillows, a straw mountain, petting farm, and cornfield maze. In between stops, you can snack on fresh donuts, caramel apples, and apple cider purchased from the store or concession stand.<p>
Blake’s Big Apple Orchard and Cider Mill
Gerald and Elisabeth Blake established Blake Farms in 1946 with the help of their 13 children. In the 60-plus years and several generations since, Blake’s has spread their operation to three locations across the metro Detroit area. More than 500 acres of orchard and farmland compose the family business, and during certain seasons, that land allows average citizens a chance to give their robotic fruit harvesters a rest and come pick their own apples, strawberries, peaches, and pumpkins. Blake’s becomes especially busy with the arrival of autumn, when it hosts an annual fall festival, and Christmastime, when its U-Cut tree program lets families team up to chop down their own tannenbaum.
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About Blake's Big Apple Orchard and Cider Mill
Gerald and Elisabeth Blake established Blake Farms in 1946 with the help of their 13 children. In the 60-plus years and several generations since, Blake's has spread their operation to three locations across the metro Detroit area. More than 500 acres of orchard and farmland compose the family business, and during certain seasons, that land allows average citizens a chance to give their robotic fruit harvesters a rest and come pick their own apples, strawberries, peaches, and pumpkins.