Twenty-four acres, two main buildings, eleven suites, several ceremony spots, one kitchen, one cutting garden. In rough order of how a weekend unfolds — and how the year turns around it.
The manor and the barn anchor the property — the rest is gardens, orchard, walking trails, and the gravel path between the two buildings the wedding party walks in slippers. Tucked off the road, far enough from the county to keep its own quiet.
Walnut Grove at the back of the property — a natural amphitheater under mature walnut trees — is the one couples ask about most. The garden trellis at the manor is the quieter option for smaller ceremonies. The barn itself becomes a ceremony space in winter or rain. Couples pick the spot that fits the season and the moment.
The reception space. Beautiful enough that a quarter of our couples pick it as their first option, even on sunny days. Holds the dance floor, the long tables, and the last several of the eleven suites — so the bridal party sleeps where the party is.
Where rehearsal dinners come out of the kitchen, where the wedding party gets ready, where Sunday brunch happens on the porch. The first several of the eleven suites are upstairs; the firepit is just outside.
Spread between the manor and the barn. King beds, claw-foot tubs, wood-burning fireplaces in the larger rooms. Close enough that the wedding party can walk between them in slippers — the wedding party and immediate family sleep on-property.
The chef is on payroll. Sofia grows most of what's in the centerpieces in the cutting garden behind the manor, then arranges it the day before. The flowers couples carry down the aisle were in the ground that morning. The plate on the table was plated in the manor kitchen, not trucked in from a kitchen forty minutes away. All-inclusive isn't a list — it's a quarter mile.
The cutting garden behind the manor, the orchard, the creek at the back of the property, the walking trails through the trees. Where couples go in the gaps between events, where retreat weekends spend most of the daylight hours.
The orchard in spring. The barn in mid-summer. The manor in October. A January wedding with snow on the roof. Couples often book the season they're imagining; just as often, they pick the season that fits the wedding they want.
Photographs do most of the work, but the property does the rest. Tours are booked after a Vision Session — that way we know what to show you.
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