Stay - Eat - Do
Where to Stay
Where to Stay
Lake City offers a variety of accommodations including quaint bed and breakfasts, lakeside vacation homes and deluxe motels and condominiums.
Where to Eat
From fresh baked artisan breads and restaurants featuring locally grown produce to superb family dining Lake City offers eateries to please anyone's palate with a wide spectrum of cuisine.

Home > Activities > Harvest
Harvest
Ferguson's Orchards
|
Address: 35878 Hwy 61 North, Lake City, MN |
Phone Number (s): 651-345-4516 |
|
Hours: Open from the end of August to the end of October Monday - Sunday, 10 am to 6 pm |
|
|
Description: We're a family owned apple orchard business with a wide variety of apples. Visit our country store for jams, honey, caramel apples, bakery products, gifts, and more. Enjoy the outdoor attractions including corn maze, photo cut-outs, and a straw bale pyramid. We also have a pick-your-own pumpkin patch |
|
Great River Vineyard/Nursery
|
Address: 35680 HWY 61 Blvd, Lake City, MN |
Phone Number (s): 877-345-3531 |
|
Hours: Seasonally |
|
|
Description: Our vineyard is located on the Great River Road - Highway 61 - about 70 miles south of Minneapolis/St. Paul, 12 miles south of Red Wing and 3 miles north of Lake City. We have been growing grapes for over 30 years with cold hardy grapes our main concern. Great River Vineyard is not a winery - but specializes in table grapes, cold hardy nursery stock and grape juice. This makes us a truly unique operation in the Midwest. |
|
Pepin Heights
|
Address: 1753 South Hwy 61, Lake City, MN |
Phone Number (s): 651-345-2305 |
|
Hours: Mon-Sun: 9am-6pm Seasonally |
|
|
Description: Our goal is to grow apples that are fresh, crisp, and delicious! With state of the art facilities, our apples are sorted, packed, and stored in optimum conditions. So whether you shop at our Lake City store or at your local supermarket, with Pepin Heights apples you can be sure you'll get that distinctive, just-picked flavor. |
|

Sea Wing
Ohuta Park
Mississippi Steamboats
On April 28, 1871 "a lake monster is seen swimming in Lake Pepin". Since then, many people have reported sightings of an unidentified creature surfacing from the depths of Lake Pepin. The locals have given this shy and elusive creature a name; Pepie.