Chilmark sits at the rural, unhurried end of Martha's Vineyard, and its goat yoga scene reflects that isolation. There is exactly one place to do this, and it happens on a working teaching farm along North Road where the landscape is all stone walls, scrub oak, and salt-tinged wind. This is up-island territory—no strip malls, no tourist crowds, just a farmyard where the pace of a July afternoon bends toward the agricultural calendar rather than the ferry schedule.
A Farm That Produces More Than Yoga
The operation here is a legitimate teaching farm, not a pop-up novelty act. The same land that hosts morning yoga sessions with baby goats also grows indigo for botanical dye workshops and produces hand-dyed yarn. Participants walk past dye gardens and fiber projects to reach the yoga clearing. The porch overlooking the property is where people linger afterward, and it functions as the unofficial decompression zone between the mat and the rest of the island.
The Short, Seasonal Window
Martha's Vineyard dictates the schedule here. Goat yoga runs roughly from late spring through early fall, with July and August sessions filling fastest. The farm sits exposed to coastal weather, so morning classes catch the calm before afternoon winds pick up across the Vineyard Sound. First-timers should understand this is an outdoor, ground-level practice—mats go directly on grass, and baby goats do not observe personal space boundaries. Dress in layers the island weather demands, and leave expectations of a pristine studio experience at the down-island ferry terminal.