There is something irreplaceable about a family farm. Not in a nostalgic, abstract way, but in the very practical sense that a farm rooted in a community provides things that no grocery chain can replicate: produce picked by hand that same morning, plants grown with local soil conditions in mind, pies made in a real kitchen from real ingredients, and the kind of unhurried seasonal rhythm that reconnects people to the way food actually works.
Imagine driving through the Will County countryside in late June, turning down Bronk Road, and finding an entire farmstead humming with summer life: greenhouse rows of sun-bright annuals, a general store stocked with local honey and homemade jam, a field of watermelons almost ready to pick. This is Bronkberry Farms, and it has been serving the Plainfield community for years.
Meet Bronkberry Farms & Greenhouse
Bronkberry Farms & Greenhouse is a seasonal family farm and agritourism destination located at 18061 South Bronk Road in Plainfield, Illinois, just southwest of Joliet in Will County. The farm operates from Earth Day (April 22) through Halloween (October 31), Tuesday through Sunday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
In those six months, Bronkberry Farms moves through the full calendar of what a working farm and greenhouse can offer: spring planting season, summer harvest, fall festival, and everything in between. It is the kind of place where families return year after year because the experience changes with the season, the products are genuinely local, and the people behind the counter actually know their farm.
The farm has earned multiple "Best Retail Business of the Year" awards from both the Plainfield and Joliet Chambers of Commerce, recognized in each year from 2020 through 2024. That streak of recognition from local business communities reflects the kind of reputation that doesn't come from marketing budgets: it comes from consistent quality and from a farm that takes its role in the community seriously.
Bronkberry Farms is listed as an approved business in the Discover Catholic Business directory as a supporter of the Catholic community in the Shorewood area, through their relationship with Holy Family Parish. Illinois is home to a vibrant Catholic population, and the DCB directory includes hundreds of Catholic-connected businesses across the state. You can browse the full Illinois directory to find more local businesses supporting the Catholic community near you.
What Grows at Bronkberry Farms
The farm's offerings follow the seasons, which is exactly the way a working farm should work.
Spring at Bronkberry is greenhouse season. The farm opens in late April with a full selection of annuals, perennials, and vegetable plants ready for home gardens. One of the farm's signature offerings in spring is custom planters: arrangements designed specifically for the customer, suited to their light conditions, color preferences, and space. For Illinois gardeners who want something more personal than a big-box nursery flat, Bronkberry's custom planter service provides exactly that.
Annuals and perennials cover the full range of what northern Illinois gardeners need: color plants for sun and shade, flowering varieties for pots and beds, and the vegetable starts that make it possible to have tomatoes and peppers in the ground by Memorial Day. The greenhouse staff knows Illinois growing conditions and can advise on what will thrive in local soil and weather.
Summer shifts the focus from planting to harvesting. Bronkberry grows watermelons, sweet corn, and tomatoes, and the farm's produce is hand-picked, meaning customers get freshness that simply isn't available through a distributor chain. A watermelon that was on the vine yesterday is a fundamentally different eating experience from one that was picked unripe and shipped 1,500 miles. This is the fundamental value proposition of a local farm: produce at the peak of ripeness, grown within sight of where it's sold.
The general store carries farm products year-round, including homemade pies, local honey, and jams. These aren't gift shop novelties. They are the products of a working farm with a kitchen, made in small batches and available while they last. Local honey in particular is a product that carries real regional character: the flavor reflects what the bees are foraging in the local landscape, and that changes with the season.
The farm also maintains animals: goats, chickens, and bees. For families with children, this is part of what makes Bronkberry an experience rather than just a shopping trip. Seeing where eggs come from, or watching bees at work, or feeding a curious goat at the fence, those are the kinds of things that connect children to the agricultural world in ways that classrooms can't replicate.
Fall is the farm's most festive season. Bronkberry hosts Fall Fest celebrations and hayrides as October approaches, turning the farm into a destination for families looking for the authentic fall experience that the Midwest does so well. The Halloween closing date means the farm captures the full pumpkin-patch season, a natural fit for a farm with an outdoor operation and an established family audience.
Beyond individual visits, Bronkberry offers classes and workshops, private parties, and field trips. The field trip program makes the farm a destination for school groups, an important part of agricultural education for children growing up in suburban Will County who may have little other exposure to how food is grown.
A Farm for the Whole Growing Season
What distinguishes Bronkberry from a simple farm stand or nursery is the intentional programming across the whole season. Opening on Earth Day and closing on Halloween creates a narrative arc for the year: spring planting gives way to summer harvest, which gives way to fall celebration. Each visit to the farm is different depending on when you go.
This approach to seasonality reflects something important about the relationship between a farm and its community. A farm that opens in spring and closes in fall is participating in the natural cycle of the agricultural year, not fighting it. Customers who visit in April for tomato seedlings are the same customers who come back in August for corn and in October for hayrides. The farm builds relationships across the season, not just transactions.
That continuity is part of what the Chamber of Commerce awards recognize. A business that earns "Best Retail" recognition for five consecutive years is doing something right on a sustained basis, not just having a good quarter. For Bronkberry, that means the custom planters are reliably excellent in May, the watermelons are reliably ready in July, and the Fall Fest is reliably worth driving for in October.
The farm also engages its community through a text alert program, sending seasonal updates to customers who subscribe. It's a simple, practical way to let regulars know when the first sweet corn is ready or when a new batch of homemade pies came out of the kitchen. For a farm that operates seasonally, keeping customers informed about what's available right now is a genuine service.
Why a Family Farm Matters in a Suburban County
Will County is one of the fastest-growing counties in Illinois. Plainfield, which was a small farming community a generation ago, has grown substantially as suburban development expanded southwest of Joliet and south of Chicago. In that context, a working farm like Bronkberry is not just a business: it is a piece of the county's agricultural heritage, maintained in the middle of a landscape that is rapidly changing.
Family farms in suburban and exurban areas play a specific role that neither urban farmers markets nor rural farms can fully replicate. They are accessible to large residential populations without requiring a long drive. They provide educational opportunities for children growing up in newly built subdivisions who might otherwise have no contact with agriculture. They anchor a sense of place in communities that are still forming their identities.
For Catholic families in the area, the farm's connection to Holy Family Parish in Shorewood adds a dimension of community trust. When a business supports a local parish, it signals a commitment to the neighborhood and the people in it. The Catholic home-services and farm businesses listed in the DCB directory reflect exactly this kind of locally rooted business that serves its community in multiple ways.
Illinois has a long agricultural tradition, and even as the state's population has shifted toward urban and suburban patterns, the land in the southern and western parts of the Chicago metro still supports working farms. Bronkberry is part of that tradition, adapted for a community that needs it to be accessible, educational, and welcoming in ways that a purely commercial operation wouldn't bother with.
You can read more about the broader Catholic business community in Illinois by exploring other featured Catholic businesses in our directory and the full range of family-owned operations we profile each week.
Supporting Bronkberry Farms
The most direct way to support Bronkberry is to visit during the season, which runs from Earth Day through Halloween. Coming in spring for plants, summer for produce, or fall for the festivities all supports a working farm that has invested in its community for years.
The general store's products, including homemade pies, local honey, and jams, travel well and make meaningful gifts for people who appreciate locally made food. Booking a private party or field trip supports the farm's programming and gives children an experience that is hard to replicate anywhere else.
The farm's text alert program (text "BRONK" to 815-362-6100) is a practical way to stay connected and know when seasonal products are available. The 5% discount on canned items for subscribers is a small bonus for what is primarily a useful communication tool.
For families in Plainfield, Shorewood, Joliet, and the broader Will County area, Bronkberry Farms is the kind of business that rewards loyalty. The more you visit across the season, the more you understand the rhythm of what the farm produces and when it's at its best.
The Discover Catholic Business directory includes 46,000+ listings across the country, from family farms to professional services. Browse Catholic businesses in Illinois to find other community-connected operations near you, or visit the Augustine Institute spotlight for another look at a Catholic organization making a sustained impact.
Bronkberry Farms Information
Bronkberry Farms & Greenhouse 18061 South Bronk Road Plainfield, IL 60586
Phone: (815) 436-6967 Email: bronkberrysite@sbcglobal.net Text alerts: Text "BRONK" to 815-362-6100
Season: April 22 through October 31 Hours: Tuesday-Sunday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. (Closed Mondays)
Sources:
- Bronkberry Farms & Greenhouse, official website: bronkberryfarms.com (products, hours, offerings, awards)
- Plainfield Chamber of Commerce, Best Retail Business of the Year recognition, plainfield-il.com