Most people come to Maryland's Coast for the crabs. The boardwalk. The ritual of it.
The people who have been coming for years, they know about August.
In Worcester County, Maryland, August is when the inland delivers. The fields have been working all summer and this is what they've been building toward: peaches that don't make it back to the car, Silver Queen corn sweet enough to eat standing over the tailgate, heirloom tomatoes ugly enough to be trusted. The farmers’ markets are full. The roadside stands are open. And if you know where to go, you can eat your way through a week on the Shore and never touch a boardwalk menu.
Here's where to start.
The Main Event: Berlin Peach Festival
Saturday, August 1, 2026 | Calvin B. Taylor House Museum, Berlin, MD
If there is one day in August that anchors everything else, it's this one.
The Berlin Peach Festival is held on the lawn of the Calvin B. Taylor House Museum in the heart of downtown Berlin, one of the most charming small towns on the East Coast. One that earns that description without trying. The festival is community-made: homemade pies, fresh cobblers, peach slushies, peach preserves, peach-themed crafts. It's the kind of afternoon where strangers hand you a peach dumpling and expect you to enjoy it.
If you want the peach dumpling on any other day of the year, check out Baked Dessert Cafe on Bay Street. It's their signature item, all-butter puff pastry, fresh peaches, and a rich caramel drizzle, and it even holds the official title of Berlin's Official Town Dessert. Come for one. Leave with several.
The Week Around It: Where August Actually Lives
The festival lasts for one day. August is a month. Here's how to spend the rest of it.
Bennett Orchards | Delmar, DE (15 min north of Berlin)
Cross the county line for pick-your-own peaches directly from the tree. Fill a bucket. Drive back down. This is one of those August rituals worth building a whole afternoon around. Confirm hours and availability before you go. This is a working orchard and season timing varies year to year. The peaches at the Berlin Farmers Market on Sunday mornings? They came from here.
The Sunday Tradition: Berlin Farmers Market | Sundays, 9 AM to 1 PM
August is the golden hour at the Berlin Farmers Market. Bratten Farms sweet corn is here at peak ripeness. BayBees Honey is set up too, which means you can purchase pure, unfiltered, local honey for your morning cup of tea. Bay Mushrooms appears with the season’s best gourmet harvest. Come early. The good stuff moves.
Beyond the peaches: Silver Queen Corn, the Eastern Shore's signature white sweet corn, creamy and tender, worth eating raw if it were picked this morning. Heirloom tomatoes, August is when the ugly ones show up, misshapen, cracked at the shoulders, not trying to impress anyone. Buy them. They taste like actual tomatoes. Artisan bread and local honey. Grab both. You now have a beach picnic that requires no recipe.
The Local Producers You Should Know
August on the Shore has a few makers whose work tells the season as well as any farm stand.
Cast 26 Coffee | Berlin Farmers Market, Sundays
Small-batch beans roasted in a cast iron skillet over an open flame, the way coffee was roasted when it was first discovered. Cast 26 started on a camping table at the Berlin Farmers Market and still shows up on Sunday mornings. Every batch is different. Every cup is warm from the roast. If you're at the Sunday market, this is your first stop.
Skilligalee Seafood | West Ocean City Harbor & Berlin
A commercial fishing family that has been working these waters for over 30 years. Captain Sonny sells directly off the boat at slip 5 on Sunset Avenue in the West Ocean City harbor, from a backyard stand in Berlin, and at the Berlin Farmers Market on Sundays. Staples include fresh fish, crabmeat, oysters, clams, and scallops, but availability changes with the catch and the season. Follow them on social media before you go. This is not a store with fixed hours. It's the most direct farm-to-table possible: off the boat, into your cooler. That's the point.
Chesapeake Bay Farms | Pocomoke, MD
Worcester County's only remaining working dairy farm. The Berlin store sits about 2.5 miles west of town on Route 50 and carries gourmet cheeses, ice cream, and local seafood, all made or sourced within the county. The ice cream is made from the milk of their own cows. You can see the farm from the parking lot. That is rare enough, in 2026, that it deserves to be said plainly: this is a place where the thing that made the food is still on the property. Grab a scoop. Sit in a rocking chair. Take your time.
Real Raw Organics | 3406 Coastal Highway, Ocean City
The area's only local kombucha brewery, brewing small-batch fermented tea on site since 2013. The SCOBYs (Symbiotic Culture of Bacteria and Yeast that makes kombucha) here are unique to the region because of the wild yeast in the ocean air, which means what you're drinking literally could not be made anywhere else. Flavors rotate through guava, blueberry ginger, matcha honey lime, pomegranate hibiscus, and more. They sell on tap at the cafe, in jars to go, and at retailers around the county. Bring back an empty jar and refill it at a discount. In August, when the heat is serious and the food is rich, a cold jar of Real Raw is the right call.
Road Trip Gold: The Farm Stand Trail
The best way to experience the Maryland Coast in August is off the highway, on the backroads, windows down. Worcester County is dotted with family-run stands that don't need a sign to find, just a slow drive and an open trunk.
Assateague Farm on Route 611 in Berlin has sunflowers and seasonal berries on the way to the beach. Pull over before the causeway crowds. The Stand on Route 50 in West Ocean City is the corn, tomatoes, and melons pull-off that locals make on the way in every time. And Bennett Orchards in Delmar is already covered, but worth repeating: pick-your-own peaches, fifteen minutes north of Berlin. Fill a bucket.
Don't Stop at Berlin, MD: The South Worcester County Food Run
Head south.
Snow Hill and Pocomoke City carry an agricultural heritage that runs deeper than the tourist circuit reaches, and that's the point.
Start at the Snow Hill Farmers Market, Thursdays from 2 PM to 7 PM at Sturgis Park Pavilion, May through October. Then walk to Del Vecchio's Bakery at 116 West Green Street. A family-owned Italian bakery baking from scratch six days a week: fresh breads, croissants, danishes, pastries that people drive from Salisbury to find. This is the kind of bakery that turns a quick stop into an hour you didn't plan on and don't regret.
The Pocomoke City Farmers Market runs Fridays starting at 7 AM along the scenic Pocomoke River waterfront. Local jams, pickles, late-summer produce, and vendors you won't find anywhere else in the county. After you shop, take your haul to Pocomoke River State Park. Shaded picnic, August heat rendered optional.
This part of the county doesn't perform for visitors. It just exists. In August, that's exactly what you want.
The Full Market Circuit
If you want to shop local every day you're here, Worcester County, MD makes it easy. Four markets, four days.
- Berlin Farmers Market runs Sundays, 9 AM to 1 PM.
- Ocean Pines Farmers & Artisans Market runs Saturdays, 8 AM to 1 PM at White Horse Park.
- Snow Hill Farmers Market runs Thursdays, 2 PM to 7 PM, May through October.
- Pocomoke City Farmers Market runs Fridays starting at 7 AM.
How to Eat Like a Maryland’s Coast Local This Month
Three things you owe yourself before August is over.
- The Tomato Sandwich. This is not optional. Thick-cut local tomato, real mayonnaise, salt, pepper, white bread. One meal this month has to be this. Eastern Shore law.
- Native Corn. Look for the signs at roadside stands that say exactly that: "Native Corn." Picked this morning means sweet enough to eat right off the cob. If it's been sitting, it already knows.
- Peach everything. The peach dumpling at Baked Dessert Cafe. The seasonal ales at Burley Oak Brewing Co. in Berlin. A bucket from Bennett Orchards you eat in the car before you make it back to the main road. August in Worcester County doesn't ask you to seek out the local food culture. It just shows up.
Plan Your August
August moves fast. The peaches have a window. The Silver Queen corn has a window. The heirloom tomatoes that taste like actual tomatoes have a window. None of it waits.
Whether you're staying in a Snow Hill B&B, a West OC vacation rental, or just down for the day, build the farm stop into the plan before you pack the car. The Shore delivers in August. You just have to show up.
What's your August harvest find? Tag your foodie photos at #VisitMarylandsCoast
Modal title