The document is a checklist of potential agritourism activities for farms and ranches to consider. It includes over 100 options organized into categories like recreational activities, demonstrations and displays, hands-on experiences, tours, festivals and events, facility rentals, and other hospitality services. The checklist is intended to stimulate ideas for activities that fit individual operations and notes that land use regulations may impact some options.
The document is a checklist of potential agritourism activities for farms and ranches to consider. It includes over 100 options organized into categories like recreational activities, demonstrations and displays, hands-on experiences, tours, festivals and events, facility rentals, and other hospitality services. The checklist is intended to stimulate ideas for activities that fit individual operations and notes that land use regulations may impact some options.
The document is a checklist of potential agritourism activities for farms and ranches to consider. It includes over 100 options organized into categories like recreational activities, demonstrations and displays, hands-on experiences, tours, festivals and events, facility rentals, and other hospitality services. The checklist is intended to stimulate ideas for activities that fit individual operations and notes that land use regulations may impact some options.
The document is a checklist of potential agritourism activities for farms and ranches to consider. It includes over 100 options organized into categories like recreational activities, demonstrations and displays, hands-on experiences, tours, festivals and events, facility rentals, and other hospitality services. The checklist is intended to stimulate ideas for activities that fit individual operations and notes that land use regulations may impact some options.
The following is a list of possible agritourism activities, to ❏ Horse stables
stimulate your thinking about what might best fit your skills, ❏ Horseback trail riding interests and facilities. Check the ones that interest you. ❏ Mountain biking ❏ Off-road vehicle driving area Clearly, some are more complex undertakings than others; ❏ Pack trips as you continue planning, be sure to analyze liability issues ❏ Rock climbing and the compatibility of your options with the character of ❏ Shooting range your farm/ranch, as well as your values, goals and financial ❏ Swimming area resources. You’ll refer back to this checklist as you proceed. ❏ Trap and skeet shooting ❏ Wilderness experiences Also keep in mind that Oregon land-use codes and ❏ Wildlife viewing regulations can limit the frequency and types of certain ❏ Equipment rentals associated with these activities agritourism activities, as well as the percentage of farm or ranch income derived from non-production uses on land Demonstrations and displays zoned for exclusive farm use (EFU). See the “Policy and ❏ Animal husbandry Regulations” section of the handbook for more specific ❏ Antique tools and equipment demonstrations guidance. ❏ Barn raising ❏ Beekeeping, homeopathy Direct sales of fresh or value-added products ❏ Bread-making, flour milling ❏ Roadside farm stand ❏ Cattle roundup and branding demonstration ❏ Farmers market ❏ Cider pressing ❏ Sale of handcrafted products ❏ Conservation technology ❏ Sale of value-added food products ❏ Demonstrations related to agricultural enterprise — sheep shearing, pruning, etc. ❏ Sale of farm/ranch promotional items—shirts, aprons, mugs, etc. ❏ Display gardens ❏ Food preparation — cheese-making, canning, etc. Overnight accommodations ❏ Harvest demonstrations ❏ Bed and breakfast ❏ Historic museum or display ❏ Cabins ❏ Traditional crafts: wool spinning, quilting, wreath- ❏ Camping sites making, soap-making, weaving, etc. ❏ Farm stay/farm vacation Hands-on experiences ❏ “Glamping” in furnished yurts, fixed tents, etc. ❏ Animal birthing ❏ “Sleeping in the Straw” in a clean barn with fresh straw to cushion sleeping bags ❏ Candle-making with local beeswax ❏ Caring for animals — helping with feeding, herding, etc. ❏ Full-service farm vacation with activities and meals ❏ Children’s camps For-fee recreation ❏ Classes in farming or ranch skills, including cooking, planting, harvesting ❏ Archery ❏ Classes in recreational activities (fishing, hunting, ❏ Bicycle trails and rentals wildlife viewing) ❏ Bird-watching ❏ Classes on crafts, especially traditional crafts ❏ Boating, canoeing, kayaking, tubing or rafting ❏ Classes on medicinal herbs and honey-based ❏ Fee fishing homeopathy ❏ Fee hunting ❏ Crafting herbal remedies ❏ Game preserve or guided hunts ❏ Cutting flowers, flower arranging ❏ Guiding and outfitting for recreation ❏ Cutting own Christmas tree ❏ Hiking trails ❏ Educational camps for adults ❏ Experience “a week in the life of” to learn and test a ❏ Presentations on local community history, culture new occupation or customs ❏ Farm or ranch work experience ❏ Rodeo ❏ Fly fishing or tying clinics ❏ Seasonally themed festival (e.g., harvest, holiday) ❏ Habitat improvement activities (e.g. native planting, ❏ Specific crop- or product-themed festival tree planting) ❏ Square dances or other similar events ❏ Hay-making — moving, raking, baling, stacking ❏ Stargazing parties ❏ Hay rides ❏ Make your own toys Pure entertainment ❏ Petting zoo ❏ Contests: apple bobbing, corn shucking, cherry-pit ❏ Photography/painting classes spitting, rooster crowing, etc. ❏ Pony rides ❏ Corn or tall-grass maze and related seasonal activities ❏ Pumpkin painting ❏ Farm-themed playground ❏ U-pick produce ❏ Gourd golf, pumpkin bowling ❏ Weed identification, seed saving ❏ Haunted barn or house ❏ Wine, beer, cider or other tasting ❏ Outdoor games ❏ Working farm stay ❏ Storytelling
Tours Facility rental and coordination
❏ Alternative crop tours ❏ Corporate or other retreats ❏ Elder hostels ❏ Family reunions ❏ Foraging for wild mushrooms, berries, plants, flowers, ❏ Weddings rocks and gems ❏ Forest ecology Other hospitality services ❏ Guided crop tours ❏ Catering services ❏ Habitat improvement projects ❏ Food trucks ❏ Heritage buildings and heritage trails ❏ Picnic baskets for sale, picnic area ❏ Production process tours for agriculture professionals ❏ Refreshment sales ❏ Self-guided farm loops and specific farm product ❏ Shuttle service to nearby attractions tours (e.g., honey trail, cheese trail) ❏ School tours or activities ❏ Vineyard, winery, brewery or cidery tour
Festivals and events
❏ Art shows ❏ Casual farm-to-table events (e.g., pancake breakfast) ❏ Craft fairs ❏ Crop art ❏ Gourmet farm-to-table events ❏ Historic or culturally themed festival (e.g., cowboy poets) This list has been compiled from Oregon’s experience and several other ❏ Hunting, cattle, sheep dog training and competition agritourism development manuals, including: Agritourism and Nature Tourism in California, 2nd Edition – University of California Agriculture ❏ Ice cream social and Natural Resources; The New Agritourism – Barbara Berst Adams; ❏ Living history events Agritourism: Cultivating Tourists on the Farm – Washington State ❏ Music events University Extension; Agritourism Master Plan for Clackamas County, ❏ Outdoor plays Clackamas County Tourism Development Council; Creating Successful Agritourism Activities for your Farm – Community Involved in Sustaining Agriculture;