Updated On: 25 August, 2024 09:50 AM IST | Mumbai | Junisha Dama
A farm stay-cum-pottery studio offers a creative escape from city life without having to drive too far out

Cynthia tore down her father’s defunct sausage factory to build the pottery studio at the farm
When Cynthia Lewis, an ex-media professional, quit her career in advertising in 2021, she chose a farm stay-cum-pottery studio in Dharamsala to spend her first few unemployed days. It was learning pottery there and living on the farm in the Himalayas, that gave her the idea to replicate the model in Mumbai. And she made her dream a reality. Once you cross over the Pisa Dam over the Bhatsa River in Titwala, a small road will lead you to Lewis Farms. The expansive property has been with the Lewis family for four generations. It’s here where the family grows mangoes and jamun, and occasionally, papaya, ramphal, and sitaphal. The farm also has a lake, where they raise tilapia fish.

At any time of the day, one can walk along tiny trails all across the farm during a stay here