Gettysburg, Pennsylvania draws millions for its Civil War history, but the goat yoga scene here has nothing to do with reenactments. There is exactly one operation in the area, and it leans hard into the agrarian side of Adams County rather than the tourist corridor. The farm sits on Blacksmith Shop Road, far enough from the visitor center that you will hear roosters and wind through the oaks instead of battlefield tour narration.
Year-Round Herd Means Hand-Reared Baby Goats
This is a functioning farm that added yoga to its roster, not a rented field running weekend sessions. The animals live here year-round, which means the baby goats you meet during spring sessions are actually born on the property. That continuity shows in how comfortable the animals are with human contact—they climb onto mats without hesitation and settle into laps during savasana like it is their job. The owners run bottle-feeding sessions alongside the yoga classes, so visitors who want hands-on time without the downward dogs have that option.
Late Spring Through Early Fall for Outdoor Classes
Outdoor classes here run from late spring through early fall. Adams County winters are raw and the ground stays wet well into April, so the season is shorter than what you find in Virginia or North Carolina. Mid-June through September is the sweet spot—warm mornings, dry grass, and the baby goats are big enough to be genuinely playful without being fragile. Morning sessions beat the humidity that settles into the farmland by early afternoon.
On-Site Goat Milk Soap Shop Extends the Visit
Expect to linger after class. The on-site goat milk soap shop is small but stocked with products made from the same herd you just practiced with. It is a modest operation—no boutique pricing or elaborate packaging—but it gives the whole visit a closed-loop feel that most pop-up goat yoga events cannot replicate. Budget an extra twenty minutes if you are the type to browse.