Goat yoga in South New Berlin is not a standalone studio class. The single venue operating here treats the practice as one element of a broader farm stay experience, anchored in the rolling hills of Chenango County where dairy pastures and hardwood ridges define the landscape. Visitors arriving at the Coye Brook Road farmhouse are entering a working rural property that has built its identity around immersive, slow-paced weekends rather than drop-in fitness sessions.
Wedding Weekend Ecosystem
The goat yoga sessions here are structured primarily around the farm's wedding packages. That means slots fill through weekend booking blocks—bridesmaids on a Saturday morning, extended family on a Sunday—rather than a public class schedule. Anyone looking to practice with the goats needs to understand this context: the yoga is excellent, but it exists within an event framework, not as daily programming.
Late Spring Through Early Fall on the Grass
Upstate New York winters make outdoor goat yoga a seasonal proposition. Sessions run from roughly May through October, with the sweet spot landing in September when the humidity breaks and the pastures dry out after summer rains. Mats go directly on the grass, and the goats—accustomed to roaming the property freely—interact with practitioners without much coaxing. The farm's glamping tents sit within view, which gives the whole thing a staged-but-genuine aesthetic that photographs well and feels removed from any urban studio environment.
Farm-to-Table Follows the Mat
What separates this from a standard goat yoga outing is what happens afterward. The same property serves family-style meals sourced from local producers, meaning a morning on the mat with the goats flows directly into a seated farm dinner. First-timers should arrive in clothes they do not mind getting dirty—hooves and hay are unavoidable—and should expect a slower, more social class format where the goats are the main attraction rather than any rigorous sequencing.