Your Guide to Langley’s Circle Farm Tour

Just 50 minutes from Vancouver, Langley has quietly become one of the Fraser Valley’s most rewarding day trips. It’s one of those places you don’t have to overthink, just get in the car and go. The Circle Farm Tour is…
A group of alpacas with wet fur stands outdoors on a grassy field, some facing the camera, with trees visible in the background.

Just 50 minutes from Vancouver, Langley has quietly become one of the Fraser Valley’s most rewarding day trips. It’s one of those places you don’t have to overthink, just get in the car and go. The Circle Farm Tour is one of the easiest ways to experience it. It’s a self-guided agri-tourism route connecting farms, wineries, distilleries, and farm markets, bringing you a little closer to the people behind it all.

Pick a direction, follow your senses, and see where the afternoon takes you.

What to expect from the Langley Circle Farm Tour

The Langley Circle Farm Tour gives you a lot to explore, without feeling rushed. South Langley sits in a microclimate that receives more sunshine and less rain than much of the Lower Mainland, creating growing conditions that help produce exceptional wine grapes and abundant berries. That means exceptional wine grapes, abundant berries, and a pretty incredible mix of farm and wine experiences.

A Circle Farm Tour may look like this: u-picking strawberries or blueberries, tasting estate wines right where they’re grown, loading up a picnic basket with fresh-baked pies and farmstead cheese, browsing a farm market, watching an equestrian event at Thunderbird Show Park, where international show jumping competitions run throughout the season, or hand-feeding an alpaca. You can even try your hand at milking a cow. It’s the kind of day where you move from stop to stop without much of a plan, and somehow it all just works.

And just when you think it’s all about food and farms, there’s a layer of history here too. Fort Langley is where the Hudson’s Bay Company first put down roots in BC, and it’s worth making time for.

An afternoon is enough for a few stops. If you’ve got the time, give it a full day and settle in. Either way, you’ll head home with something good, maybe a full cooler, maybe just a really great day.

LANGLEY FARM EXPERIENCES

This is where the circle farm tour really comes to life. Langley’s farm experiences are working farms that genuinely welcome visitors, not as an afterthought, but as part of who they are. Come ready to get your hands a little dirty, fill your basket, and spend a little longer than you planned. If you’re u-picking berries in the summer heat, meeting the resident alpacas at Kensington Prairie, or watching a dairy operation up close at Eagle Acres, these are the places where the tour really comes to life. Most people leave already thinking about when they’ll come back.

  • Central Park Farms – 225 216th Street
    Known for its farm-fresh eggs, seasonal produce, and welcoming atmosphere, it’s a great stop to experience local agriculture up close and pick up quality, locally grown goods.
  • Eagle Acres Dairy & Pumpkin Patch — 8796 240th Street
    A working dairy farm where you can tour the operation and try your hand at milking a cow (March–September). Come fall, the pumpkin patch takes over.
  • Kensington Prairie Farm — 1736 248th Street
    Home to Huacaya alpacas and Hereford cattle, with a farm store stocking alpaca fibre products, home-grown beef, honey, and eggs. Group tours available by appointment.
  • Krause Berry Farms & Estate Winery — 6179 248th Street
    One of the tour’s most popular stops, for good reason. U-pick strawberries, raspberries, blueberries, and blackberries; an on-site bakery and waffle bar; a harvest kitchen; and an estate winery producing fruit wines worth lingering over.
  • Milner Valley Cheese — 21479 Smith Crescent
    Small-batch farmstead cheeses made from their own goats’ milk, alongside lamb, soap, and goat milk gelato. The kind of find that goes straight into the picnic basket.
  • Thunderbird Show Park — 24550 72 Avenue, Langley, BC
    Tbird is one of North America’s premier equestrian event facilities, hosting six globally recognized hunter and jumper tournaments per year.

FARM STORES AND MARKETS

This is where you stock up on the local and the lovingly made. These stops are a little quieter than the farm experiences, but no less worthwhile. 

You’ll find honey straight from Fraser Valley hives, thoughtfully raised meats, seasonal produce, and shelves lined with things you’ll end up building a meal around later. It’s the kind of shopping that follows you home in your cooler, your kitchen, and the meals you’ll talk about after.

It’s easy to underestimate these stops, but they’re usually the ones that follow you home, in your cooler, your kitchen, and the meals you end up talking about later.

  • Bonetti Meats – 3986 248th Street
    Traditional butchers with in‑house sausages, bacon, custom cuts, and deli goods.
  • Cedar Rim Nursery — 7024 Glover Road
    A family-owned nursery that’s been a Langley fixture for decades. A good stop if you’re as interested in what to grow as what to eat.
  • JD Farms Specialty Turkey — 24726 52nd Avenue
    Thoughtfully raised specialty turkey, available beyond the usual November window. A genuine farm-direct find.
  • Otter Co-op — 3650 248th Street
    A community-focused co-op offering local produce, artisanal goods, and pantry staples. Perfect for picking up fresh, sustainable finds while supporting local farmers and makers.

Well Seasoned – #117 – 20353 64th ave
A must-visit for food lovers, this specialty shop is packed with gourmet ingredients, unique kitchen finds, and locally sourced products.

WINES, CIDERIES AND DISTILLERIES

This is one of the easiest ways to shape your day. You can move from a vineyard to a cidery to a craft brewery or distillery in a matter of minutes.

What stands out is how connected everything feels to the land around you.

Langley does both grape and fruit wines really well, which gives you a bit more range than you might expect. Add in a brewery and a distillery, and it’s an easy place to find something you’re into, if you’re a wine person, a cider person, or just figuring that out as you go.

  • Backyard Vineyards — 3033 232nd Street
    Small vineyard producing award‑winning BC wines from locally grown grapes.
  • Chaberton Estate Winery — 1064 216th Street
    One of Langley’s oldest wineries with French‑inspired cuisine at Bacchus Bistro and classic wine tastings.
  • Festina Lente Estate Winery — 21113 16th Avenue
    Boutique estate known for premium meads and wines, recognized by Wines of Canada.
  • Fraser Valley Cider Company – 22128 16 Avenue
    A laid-back craft cidery serving up small-batch ciders made from locally sourced apples. With a cozy tasting room and rotating taps, it’s the perfect spot to sip, relax, and enjoy.
  • Glass House Estate Winery — 23449 0 Avenue
    Charming family-run winery crafting small-lot, hand-picked wines. Relax in the vineyard, sip a flight, and soak in the countryside views.
  • Krause Berry Farms & Estate Winery — 6179 248th Street
    Pick fresh berries, enjoy farm‑made pies, and sip fruit wines in the beautiful Fraser Valley gardens.
  • Locality Brewing — 25160 72nd Avenue
    Craft beer and cider destination with seasonal brews, picnic space and local food offerings.
  • Otter Trail Winery — 5974 248th Street
    Elegant vineyard set among rolling Langley hills, offering handcrafted wines and seasonal farm-to-table dishes. Relax on the patio with a tasting flight or linger over brunch with vineyard views.
  • Roots and Wings Distillery — 7897 240th Street
    Langley’s original farm‑to‑bottle distillery serving artisanal spirits and cocktails. 
  • Township 7 Vineyards & Winery — 21152 16th Avenue
    Boutique vineyard with cool‑climate wines and scenic vineyard views, perfect for tastings and a relaxing stop.

HOW TO PLAN YOUR CIRCLE FARM TOUR VISIT

There’s no one way to do the Langley Circle Farm Tour. Some people build a loose loop around a few stops; others pick a theme, all wineries, all farms, or a bit of both, and go from there. You can plan it out, or just see where the day takes you.

The Langley Visitor Centre (7888 200th Street) can help you map a route, and the official Circle Farm Tour brochure is a practical companion for the day.

Hours and seasonal availability vary by stop, so it’s worth checking ahead before you go. Berry season runs through summer; pumpkin patches peak in October; wineries and farm stores are generally open year-round.

For maps, partner details, and up-to-date hours, visit the Circle Farm Tour website.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT LANGLEY’S CIRCLE FARM TOUR 

Is the Langley Circle Farm Tour free?
The route itself is self-guided and free to follow. Individual stops, tastings, u-pick experiences, and farm tours have their own pricing, which varies by location.

How long does the Langley Circle Farm Tour take?
You can do a handful of stops in an afternoon, or make a full day of it. Most visitors spend three to six hours, depending on how many stops they make and how long they linger.

When is the best time to visit the Langley Circle Farm Tour?
Each season offers something different. Summer is peak u-pick season for strawberries, raspberries, and blueberries. Fall brings pumpkin patches. Wineries and farm stores are generally open year-round.

Do I need to book ahead for the Langley Circle Farm Tour?
Most stops are drop-in, but some farm experiences require advanced bookings. It’s worth checking individual farm websites before you go.

Where do I get a Langley Circle Farm Tour map?
The Langley Visitor Centre at 7888 200th Street has printed brochures and can help you plan a route. You can also find maps and partner details at circlefarmtour.com.

How far is Langley from Vancouver?
Langley is about 50 minutes from Vancouver by car, making it a straightforward day trip from the city.

Can I do the Langley Circle Farm Tour with kids?
Yes. Many stops are very family-friendly. Eagle Acres Dairy offers cow-milking experiences, Kensington Prairie has alpacas, and Krause Berry Farms has u-pick and a popular waffle bar for families.

Can I buy wine on the Langley Circle Farm Tour?
Yes. The route includes several estate wineries, including Chaberton, Glass House, Otter Trail, Backyard Vineyards, and Township 7, all within a short drive of each other.

What is the Circle Farm Tour?
The Circle Farm Tour is a self-guided agri-tourism route connecting farms, wineries, cideries, distilleries, and farm markets across the Fraser Valley. Langley is one of the main stops on the route.

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