Springtime Calling… Doorfodils, Trillium, Cherry and Apple Blossoms in Door County

Check out all the upcoming April, May and June 2012 events in the Door County Spring Activity Guide (pdf).


Back in 1993, Bob Hastings Jr. started enlisting fellow members of the Door County Chamber of Commerce in a daffodil bulb planting campaign that he called the Festival of Blossoms. His son, Bob Hastings III, put the plan into action as director of the Chamber now known as the Door County Visitor Bureau. Since then, it is estimated that more than 2.5 million of these spring-flowering bulbs have been planted throughout Door County to compliment the white sea of trillium in the forests, the cherry and apple tree blossoms and all of the other abundant wild flowers.

Bob’s daughter Sarah Sawyer now owns and operates the family’s Egg Harbor Lodge and explains, “Door County actually has acquired its own daffodil variety… the Doorfodil (a special white-and-apricot variety) and I’m not making that up! We are the Door County version of Holland, Michigan and their tulips – only (we think) better. I am pretty proud that my family had a hand in this gig.”

Each year, thousands of people flock to Door County to see the cherry and apple blossoms blooming in the dozens of orchards that dot the landscape. Always a favorite, the cherry blossoms usually open late in May, often just in harmony with the Memorial Day Weekend. Dale Seaquist owner of Seaquist Orchards, just north of Sister Bay, says he has it down to a science. He can predict, to the day, when the cherries will bloom. Door County is the fourth largest cherry-producing region in the USA with approximately 2,200 acres of cherry orchards, most of which are visible from the highways. Cherry trees blossom for a few weeks, then follow the apple blossoms.

The trillium cover the woodlands with a sea of white blossoms but please, don’t pick them! Picking a trillium seriously injures the plant by preventing the leaf-like bracts from producing food for the next year. A plant takes many years to recover. Some of the rarest wild flowers in the nation are found in the Ridges Sanctuary, a 1600-acre preserve in Baileys Harbor. The Ridges is home to one of the largest concentrations of rare plants and orchids in the Midwest. On any given day after mid-April, one can find a variety of native wildflower species by simply walking down Ridges Road or hiking the trails within the Sanctuary.

Door County’s Wildflower Blooming Schedule:

Starting in April- Daffodils, Hepatica and Rock Cress

Starting in May- Dwarf Lake Iris (only for the month of May), Clintonia, Trillium, Mayflowers, Jack-in-the-Pulpit, Wild Columbine, Yellow Lady’s Slipper Orchids, Starflower, Bunchberry, Canada Anemone, Starry Solomon’s Plume, Coralroot, Apple and Cherry Blossoms, Wild Strawberry, Red-Osier Dogwood, Sarsaparilla

Starting in June-Blue-Flag Wild Iris, Pink-Flowered Pyrola, Thimbleberry, Swamp Buttercup, Spreading Dogbane, Twin Flower, Evening Primrose, St. John’s Wort, Black Eyed Susan, Bluebell

Starting in July- Marsh Five-Fingers and Goldenrod

Starting in August- Purple Gerardia

Tracking Fall Foliage, the Apple Season and Upcoming Door County Festivals

The Fall colors are just starting to appear amidst the green in Door County and the farm fresh apples are ripe!

The Sweet Tango apples are now available at the growers’ stands like Wood’s Orchards and the Honey Crisps are just starting to come on. The Schopf’s annual Dairy View Corn Maze is ready to baffle you… so come outside and enjoy the natural beauty that surrounds you in Door County!

38th Annual Townline Art Fair

A juried art fair exhibiting the work of more than 85 professional artists from across the Midwest exhibit during the two-day show held rain or shine. Glass, pottery, metal sculpture, paintings, photography, fiber art, and woodworking will be under tents for the 5,000 people that annually attend the show.
Saturday, October 8 from 10 am to 5 pm
Sunday, October 9 from 10 am to 4 pm
Hwy. 42 at the north end of Ephraim, WI  54211

Egg Harbor Pumpkin Patch Festival
Fun-filled weekend! Free admission. Live music, carnival rides, inflatable bouncer, arts & crafts vendors, face painting, pumpkin and scarecrow displays, roaming magician, storyteller, silent auction and more…
Click for Pumpkin Patch details and a free poster!

Saturday, October 8
9am-4:30pm Silent Auction
10am-2pm Modern Day Drifters
10am-4pm Carnival Rides & Inflatable Bouncers
10am-4pm Face Painting
10am-5pm Juried Arts & Crafts Vendors
11am-1pm Children’s Musician Randy Peterson
11am-3pm Roaming Magician Bruce Hetzler
1pm-4pm Storyteller Carol Johnson
2pm-5:30pm Mango Brothers | Jimmy Buffet Tribute
Sunday, October 9
10am-1:15pm Mighty Mouth | Rock & Blues
10am-4pm Carnival Rides & Inflatable Bouncers
10am-4pm Face Painting
10am-5pm Juried Arts & Crafts Vendors
12pm-3pm Storyteller Carol Johnson
1:15-1:45pm UW-Madison Marching Band performs
1:30pm-4:30pm Big Mouth & The Power Tool Horns | Rock & Blues

Sister Bay Fall Festival

Celebrating the fun of the seasons like no other Door County community, Sister Bay has hosted the largest Fall Festival for more than 65 years! The Village has been known as “Festival Village” for many years, because Sister Bay hosts more festive events than any other northern Door County village or town.
Friday and Saturday, October 14 – 15 from 10 am to 5 pm
Sunday, October 16 from 10 am to 3 pm
In the heart of Sister Bay.

WI Fall Foliage Guides:

Wisconsin Fall Color Reports – The official site with periodic updates on key locations throughout the state, suggested driving tours for fall foliage day trips and weekend getaways, related Wisconsin fall events and activities, links to local apple and pumpkin picking farms.

The Foliage Network – Regular fall foliage reports updated twice weekly for the entire Midwest including Wisconsin, Michigan, Minnesota and Ohio.

WI Fall Foliage Hotline: 800.432.8747