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By Kristi Palma
‘Tis the season for fall fun, and the North Shore is bursting with autumnal activities for all ages.
From apple picking to spooky tours to leaf peeping, discover ways to fill up your calendar with memorable events this fall season.

It’s hard to go wrong at area farms during the fall season, but some are real standouts, according to local experts and readers.
For great live music on weekends, head to Amesbury’s Cider Hill Farm, Nancy Gardella, executive director of the North of Boston Convention & Visitors Bureau, told Boston.com. And, of course, the farm offers apple picking, cider doughnuts, and more. While in Amesbury, it’s also worth checking out the city’s many excellent restaurants and shops, she said.
Cider Hill Farm was named one of the best places to get cider doughnuts in New England by Boston.com readers.
Smolak Farms in North Andover is another great fall destination for hay rides, seasonal treats, and apple and pumpkin picking, Gardella told Boston.com. It was also named among the best places to get cider doughnuts by Boston.com readers. North Andover is a great unexpected New England town great for fall activities this season.
Pumpkin lovers, take note: Connors Farm in Danvers was voted among the best pumpkin patches in Massachusetts by a FamilyDestinationsGuide.com poll. Country Living magazine also named its corn maze one of the best in the U.S.

It’s fall in New England, so there’s no shortage of colorful leaves.
One town worth visiting this fall season is Andover, where visitors can enjoy a hike — and the season’s foliage — in Harold Parker State Forest or Ward Reservation, Gardella told Boston.com. In the latter, visitors can search for the Solstice Stones from Holt Hill.
Road trippers can drive along the Essex Coastal Scenic Byway, a 90-mile roadway connecting 14 coastal communities from Lynn to Salisbury. It was named one of the best fall foliage trips in the U.S. by Fodor’s Travel.
“Stunning displays of fall color greet visitors driving along the Essex Coastal Scenic Byway, but it’s the journey through coastal communities and porches prettified with pumpkins that sets the backdrop for this memorable drive,” the site wrote.

The historic city of Salem welcomes nearly 1 million tourists during October for its month-long Haunted Happenings.
For those looking to learn more about the city’s history, there are dozens of tours, including the History & Hauntings of Salem Guided Walking Tour, named the No. 1 cultural and historical tour in America by Tripadvisor users.
“What we love about this tour is that it’s a little bit of everything of Salem’s history and the Salem experience,” Beth Crowley, owner and guide, told Boston.com. “A lot of tours will focus on just the witch trials or just ghost stories. We combine so our travelers will learn about our maritime history. They’ll also do a deep dive into the Salem witch trials of 1692. We’ll also expose them to three centuries of beautiful architecture as well. And, of course, we throw in the spooky ghost stories.”
While in Salem, visitors can check out another renowned tour at The House of the Seven Gables, just named the best historical house tour in the U.S. by Newsweek. The house was the inspiration behind the 1851 novel by Nathaniel Hawthorne of the same name.

New England has plenty of historic homes, and one such gem is the Parson Capen House in Topsfield, Erin Merrill, assistant town clerk of Topsfield, told Boston.com.
The Parson Capen House is the former home of Reverend Parson Capen, the town’s minister from 1684 to 1725. He built the home, now a National Historic Landmark, in 1683.
Capen was minister during the Salem witch trials in 1692, and members of his congregation were hanged for witchcraft, according to the Salem Witch Museum.
Speaking of Salem: Visitors there can tour The Witch House, one of several Salem witch trial destinations.
“The Witch House was the home of Jonathan Corwin who was a judge in the Salem Witch Trials,” according to historyofmassachusetts.org. “Corwin purchased the house in 1675 and lived there for 40 years until his death in 1718.”
Hale Farm in nearby Beverly, where Rev. John Hale, the pastor at Beverly’s First Parish Church, wrote a book about his eyewitness account of the Salem witch trials, hosts fall programs.

“There’s a very authentic hyperlocal food and sipping scene” Gardella told Boston.com about communities north of Boston.
Historic downtown Haverhill’s industrial buildings offer plenty of options.
Just a few spots serving hungry visitors are The Hidden Pig, an American-style gastro pub featured on Phantom Gourmet, and The Tap Brewing Company. Skyline Social, a 10th floor rooftop lounge, opened over the summer and offers seasonal cocktails, shareable bites, and sweeping city views.
In Newburyport, where visitors are drawn to the city’s historic downtown for its boutique shops and waterfront restaurants, hungry shoppers can eat at Sea Level Oyster Bar, Oregano Pizzeria & Ristorante, Black Cow, and more.
It’s worth checking out The Grog, a city staple that has been serving patrons for more than half a century, Richard Burke Jones, city clerk of Newburyport told Boston.com.
“It has famous clam chowder,” Jones said. “It’s really known for that.”
The pub offers 32 beers on tap, including Pumpkinhead Ale with a cinnamon sugar rim.
Kristi Palma is the travel writer for Boston.com, focusing on the six New England states. She covers airlines, hotels, and things to do across Boston and New England. She is the author of the award-winning Scenic Six, a weekly travel newsletter.
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