Pittsford Village Chat
Adam Stetzer
Your June 2026 Guide to Pittsford Village: Events, Activities, and What Not to Miss
Pittsford Village ChatYour June 2026 Guide to Pittsford Village: Events, Activities, and What Not to Miss
8 min read·things to do in Pittsford NY summer 2026

Your June 2026 Guide to Pittsford Village: Events, Activities, and What Not to Miss

The Short Version

  • The centerpiece of Pittsford's June is the E Pluribus Unum Community Picnic on June 28 at Spiegel Pavilion — a Town and Village co-hosted America 250 celebration with a Declaration of Independence reading, a sing-along, and a commemorative cookbook residents can contribute to.
  • The Pittsford Community Library's June calendar runs from a Red Cross Blood Drive on June 5 through a lecture on Extraordinary Women of the American Revolution on June 29 — more events than most residents realize are happening.
  • The Friends of the Library Book Sale runs June 11–14, with a dedicated kids sale on June 14 — one of the village's most reliably well-stocked and well-attended annual events.
  • Village of Pittsford property taxes are payable starting June 1 and due July 1 without penalty; this year's bills include a community survey worth filling out and returning.
  • Free bike bells are available at Village Hall for residents under 16 while supplies last — registration required, and useful for the Erie Canal towpath where cyclists and pedestrians share the trail.

June in Pittsford has its own particular rhythm. The towpath fills up before the heat earns it. The farmers market lines get longer. The library — and this surprises people who only think of it as a place to pick up books — gets genuinely busy. If you are looking for things to do in Pittsford NY this summer 2026, the answer is: more than you might realize. June in particular packs in an America 250 celebration, a full run of library events, and a few practical village deadlines that are easy to miss if you are not paying attention.

Here is what is on the calendar, what is worth your time, and what not to overlook.

The Big One: E Pluribus Unum Community Picnic — June 28

The Big One: E Pluribus Unum Community Picnic — June 28

The Big One: E Pluribus Unum Community Picnic — June 28

On June 28, the Town and Village of Pittsford are co-hosting a community gathering at Spiegel Pavilion to mark the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. The event runs noon to 2pm: a reading of the Declaration of Independence, a patriotic sing-along, and a community picnic.

The name — E Pluribus Unum, out of many, one — is worth sitting with for a moment. Two hundred fifty years is a number that can feel abstract when you encounter it in a headline. It feels different when you are standing in a local pavilion with your neighbors, listening to the founding document read aloud. This is what the America 250 initiative is designed to look like when it actually lands somewhere specific.

There is a cookbook component worth knowing about. Residents are invited to submit a family recipe for a commemorative cookbook tied to the celebration. If you have a dish that has been in your family for generations — or one that has simply become a Pittsford tradition at your table — this is the moment to put it in the record. Details on how to participate are available through the Village of Pittsford news page.

The Spiegel Pavilion is the same community space the village uses for outdoor gatherings all summer long. Coming out on June 28 is one of the simpler ways to feel connected to both this town and something considerably larger.

What is the recipe your family would put in that cookbook — the dish that would tell a stranger something true about your table?

The Pittsford Community Library Has More Going On Than You Think

The Pittsford Community Library Has More Going On Than You Think

The Pittsford Community Library Has More Going On Than You Think

The Pittsford Community Library has a genuinely full June calendar, and most of it is easy to miss if you are not looking for it.

The month opens with a Red Cross Blood Drive on June 5, from 10am to 3pm in the Fisher Meeting Room. If you have been meaning to donate and want something close and convenient, this is it.

The Friends of the Library Book Sale runs June 11 through June 14. This is one of the more reliably good annual events in the village — the selection is always worth the trip and the prices are genuinely low. A dedicated kids sale runs on June 14. If you have children in the house, that Saturday is worth circling.

Mid-month brings a Watercolor Class on June 15 and the Nonfiction Book Group on June 22. These two events say something about what the library has become in Pittsford: a community hub that happens to have books, not just a building where books happen to live. The range of programming is broader than most people who don't use it regularly realize.

The month closes on June 29 with a lecture: Extraordinary Women of the American Revolution, at 6:30pm. Given that the America 250 community picnic lands the day before at Spiegel Pavilion, the timing feels intentional. Two evenings, two different angles on the same anniversary. If you are going to the picnic on Saturday, the lecture on Sunday is a natural follow-on.

What would you learn about the women behind the American founding that you don't already know?

Canal, Towpath, and Getting Outside in Pittsford

Canal, Towpath, and Getting Outside in Pittsford

Canal, Towpath, and Getting Outside in Pittsford

June is one of the best months to be on the Erie Canal towpath. The trails are dry from spring, the humidity hasn't settled in yet, and the light on this stretch of western New York — long, flat, and clear — is better in June than almost any other month.

The towpath through Pittsford runs through Schoen Place and extends toward both Fairport and Bushnell's Basin, connecting to the Erie Canalway Trail, which runs 360 miles across New York State. For walkers, cyclists, and runners, June is the reliable window: before the summer heat arrives and before the trail crowds up in July and August.

One practical item from the Village of Pittsford: free bike bells are available for residents under 16 at Village Hall, while supplies last. Registration is required. If you have kids who ride on the towpath, this is worth picking up — the trail sees a consistent mix of pedestrians and cyclists, and a bell is a simple courtesy that prevents a lot of close calls.

Schoen Place remains one of the better places to land after a morning on the towpath. The waterfront stretch has outdoor seating, canal views, and the particular pleasure of watching boats work through the lock. Summer hours are in effect at most spots starting in June — worth confirming directly with wherever you're planning to stop before you head out.

Local Businesses and What's Open for Summer

Local Businesses and What's Open for Summer

Local Businesses and What's Open for Summer

A few things worth knowing about the village business side this summer.

Pittsford Pub and Grille has catering available for summer gatherings and events. If you are planning something — a neighborhood party, a graduation celebration, a family reunion — local catering is worth exploring before defaulting to the big chains. Keeping that business in Pittsford is not a small thing.

breathe yoga and juice bar has summer membership options available for the season. For anyone looking to maintain or start a practice through the warmer months, it is worth checking current pricing and schedule options directly with the studio.

Village office summer hours shift with the season. Before making a trip to any village office, a quick check of the Village of Pittsford website can save a wasted drive. The main news page stays current with any schedule changes.

The Schoen Place waterfront is the engine of the village in summer. The restaurants and shops along that stretch pull people in from across the region all season long. Spending an afternoon there — a meal, a coffee, an hour watching the canal — is how the village stays what it is.

Property Taxes and Village News You Should Know

Property Taxes and Village News You Should Know

Property Taxes and Village News You Should Know

Village of Pittsford property taxes are payable starting June 1 and due July 1 without penalty. Bills are available online and by mail. If you haven't received yours, or want to pay early, the village website is the right starting point.

This year's bills include a community survey — a direct line to village leadership on what matters to residents. These surveys are not decorative. Filling it out and returning it is a real input into how Pittsford allocates its attention and resources. If you have thoughts about what the village is doing well, or where its focus should shift, this is the formal channel for that.

The Department of Public Works and village offices are on summer hours through the season. Hours are published on the village website. This matters practically if you need to reach the DPW for a permit, a utility question, or a road concern — don't assume the standard year-round schedule applies.

One note for families with teens in the district: Regents exams begin June 9 for grades 9 through 12. K-8 students are on a different schedule. For households with high schoolers, the first two weeks of June are exam season — plan the calendar accordingly.

June is always a month of transitions in Pittsford — the school year ending, summer beginning, the village shifting gears. What doesn't change is the place itself and the people who keep showing up for it. The community picnic on June 28 is worth adding to your calendar. So is the morning on the towpath, the book sale, the lecture on June 29. The month is full, if you're paying attention.

What would you want the village to know, if you had one survey question to answer honestly?

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