Bad Coyote Farm

Bad Coyote Farm Hay, Orchard, and Row Crops grown beside the Rio Grande in Corrales, NM

It's almost that time again!We're smarter now and bale in the barn, where it's shady and we have a Big Ass Fan to keep u...
05/26/2026

It's almost that time again!

We're smarter now and bale in the barn, where it's shady and we have a Big Ass Fan to keep us cool. But there will still be plenty of hay down my bra to keep the task "interesting". 😂

The hay fields are green again, the crops forming emerald rows, and soon: blackberries!
05/19/2026

The hay fields are green again, the crops forming emerald rows, and soon: blackberries!

The 2026 regular season for The Corrales Growers' Market starts this Sunday 4/26, and Bad Coyote Farms will be there, wi...
04/25/2026

The 2026 regular season for The Corrales Growers' Market starts this Sunday 4/26, and Bad Coyote Farms will be there, with lots of large veggie and flower seedlings for sale, along with our usual goodies, such as garden huckleberry jam, strawberry popcorn, chiles dried or ground, and fermented chile sauces.

https://www.facebook.com/corralesgrowersmarket/posts/pfbid02UdYJhAT1tuRiLBiqsMr3W2N6CRMgw9UcNah8od9jPBXU2DACrpxB6DWoUuEjqxwel

Sunday, April 26 Market, 9AM-12PM & Master Gardeners Plant Sale

‼️NOTE‼️Parking in the adjacent lot is limited. Plan to park at the Post Office or the Anderson lot, just north of the Post Office. See market map attached to this post.

MARKET PLAZA
--> Market Shop
1st edition Corrales Cookbook now available! Recipes brought to you from the Corrales Grower’s Market
African Market Baskets: Large Round, Mini- Round, Soe Tray, Large Shopping Tote, Red Chile Aprons, Growers Market Logo T-shirts - Arctic Blue, Grey Fog, Warm Gold
--> Corrales Farmers’ Coalition
Support Farmers in Corrales: Shopping bags

NORTH
1. Corrales Classic Farm
Garlic, Green Onions, Beets, Garlic Powder, Blue and White Corn Meal, Dried Oyster Mushrooms, Dehydrated Rattlesnake beans, Dehydrated Onions, Dry White Corn, Lavender sachet, Dry herbs, Dry Floral DĂŠcor

2. Tony’s Farm
Dehydrated Apples-Plain, Cinnamon, Green Chile, Filtered Honey: Jars and Bears, Bees Wax, Cherry Jam, Peach Jam, Lavender Peach Jam, Lavender Cherry Jam

3. Siempre Tarde
Fruit Pies, Raspberry Bars, Biscuits, Fruit Preserves, Jams and Jellies

4. Susie’s Native Bread
Orno Bread, Tortillas, Pueblo Pies, Fruit Bread

5. Dulce Farms
Asparagus, Lettuce, Broccoli, Carrots, Radishes, Fresh Herbs, Eggs

6. Bad Coyote Farm
Huckleberry Jam, Strawberry Popcorn, Sweet Potato Butter, Dried Peppers: Chiltepin, Thai, Chile de Arbol, Peri Peri, Fermented Hot Sauce

7. Queen Bee Farm
Honey, Pollen, Honey Products

8. Hand to Mouth Foods
Bread, Pastries, Plant Starts (Tomatoes, Blackberries, Cuban Oregano, Garlic)

EAST
9. Tafoya Farm
Onions, Kale, Jams, Jellies, Eggs, Frozen Green Chile, Farm Crafts

10. Red Mountain Microgreens
Fresh Micro Greens and Herbs

11. EMS Farm
Cooking Greens, Spinach, Collards, Chard, Arugula

12. Masa Padre
Focaccia, Sourdough Bread, Olive Oil Muffins, Cowboy cookies

13. Enchanted Farm Mushrooms
Fresh Mushrooms: Shiitake, Chestnut, Oyster, Dehydrated gourmet mushrooms, Mushroom Powders- Lions Mane, Shiitake, Mushroom Tinctures, Grow kits. Email preorders to: store+[email protected]

14. NM Prickly Pear
Prickly Pear Jelly, Prickly Pear Syrup

15. M***a Vista Farms
Greens, Eggs, turnips, lettuce, Plant starts

16. Microgreen Magic
Micro Greens, Wheat Grass, Sprouts (Mung beans, Wasabi, Sunflower, Radish)

SOUTH
17. Chile del Sol
Honey, Honey products, Rubs

18. Bailon Native Baking
Pueblo Bread, Tortillas

19. Bar Star Family Garden
Asparagus, Eggs, Pecans, Plant Starts

20. Farm 448
Relish, Pickles, Pickled vegetables, Flavored Vinegars and Oils, Pepper sauce

21. Dr. Deb’s Apothecary
Handmade therapeutic products from indigenous medicinal herbs, aroma therapy, herbal and aromatherapy facial masques, bath salts, sachets, smudges, single herb, and herbal blend teas

WEST
22. Sandoval County Master Gardeners Plant Sale
Local plant starts for your garden brought to you by the Corrales Master Gardeners.

23. Apple Tree Farms
Native landscaping plants

24. Milligan Ranch
Handmade Goat milk Soap-plain and scented, Wood Crafts, Pork- Ground, Ribs, Roasts, Chops, Bacon, loose and link sausage, Goat-Ground, Chops, Lamb-Ground, Chops, Beef Cuts

25. Sile Pastures
Grass fed and finished lamb and Beef, Tallow skin products

26. Nacimiento Natural Products
Chicken eggs, Dog Treats, Roasted/Salted Pinion, Dog bones, Merino Wool and Farm Crafts, Tallow skin products, Ground beef-on special 5lbs/$40.00, Stew meat-on special 5lbs/$40.00 Fajita meat, Flat iron steaks, Filets, Ribeye, Chuck filets, T-Bones, Sirloin steaks, Flank steaks, Skirt steaks, Tri-tip roasts, Boneless chuck roasts, Brisket, Lengua, Liver, Kidney, Heart, Soup bones-to pre-order email [email protected] or text 425-345-0666

27. At Last Farm/Sandia Sauce
Red, Green and Christmas BBQ sauces

28. Apple Tree CafĂŠ
Made to order New Mexico Breakfast burritos and bowls
NOTE: Cash only!

11/22/2025
9-13Pretty, pretty girl on my glove. I've also found two eggs cases today  while weeding, and put them someplace safe.
09/16/2025

9-13

Pretty, pretty girl on my glove. I've also found two eggs cases today while weeding, and put them someplace safe.

Wednesday markets are typically sparsely attended, so we didn't bring all 27 varieties of peppers we have available, but...
09/10/2025

Wednesday markets are typically sparsely attended, so we didn't bring all 27 varieties of peppers we have available, but, we've still got a pretty nice spread.

At Bad Coyote Farm, our tomatoes are going gangbusters and we have an entire table of delicious varieties for cooking or...
08/17/2025

At Bad Coyote Farm, our tomatoes are going gangbusters and we have an entire table of delicious varieties for cooking or eating. We've also got lots of varieties of peppers, as well as cucumbers, tigger melons, strawberry popcorn, coyote balls, AND (finally!) back on the table and made from our freshly harvested garden huckleberries, our famous chuckle huckleberry jam!

08/14/2025

$250,000 for a single acre. That is what developers are offering for my farm. At first glance, it sounds like a dream. But for me, it’s a reminder of the pressure closing in on farms like mine. Our land sits in a place they call a “land shortage” area, where open fields are quickly disappearing to make way for houses and shopping centers.
My farm is 313 years old. For the past 92 years, my family has cared for it, just as three families did before us. We’ve worked these fields through good harvests and bad storms, trusting the soil to give back what we put into it. Developers visit often, talking about how many houses they could build here. But they don’t see the history, the sweat, the long nights, or the generations of love that are rooted in this ground.

Farming is not easy. It demands everything from you—your strength, your patience, your hope. Yet it’s a life I would never trade. There is a quiet joy in planting seeds, caring for them, and watching them grow into food that feeds not only my family but my neighbors too. Even in the hardest years, when nature works against us, farmers rise again with a new season ahead.

As the New Year begins, I want to ask you to add one more resolution to your list—support your local farms.

Here’s how you can make a difference:
• Cook at home more and let farm-fresh produce guide your meals.
• Buy a farm share through a CSA and invest in your local growers.
• Choose milk from nearby dairies.
• Visit farmers markets close to your home or work.
• Spend a day at a farm and meet the people who grow your food.

Once farmland is developed, it’s gone forever. The only way farms can survive is if their communities stand with them. Every choice you make at the market is a vote for the future you want—one that keeps green fields, fresh food, and hardworking farmers alive.

Let’s make that future possible. Choose local. Eat local. Support the hands that feed you.

Wednesday at The Corrales Growers' Market. Our carrot crop sold out months sooner than we had projected, but, we have mo...
08/06/2025

Wednesday at The Corrales Growers' Market. Our carrot crop sold out months sooner than we had projected, but, we have more germinated, and next year we'll plant more rows. Our dragon carrots are so delicious that we literally have repeat customers who stand by our booth, extolling the virtues of our carrots to passersby. 😂 We love our customers!

Our cantaloupes and a significant portion of our cucumbers and tomatoes are already gone. Good market day, despite our third or fourth 100F or over day in a row.

We had a fabulous (if frantic) day at the market, with folks lining up to buy our farm goodies. In no time, we went from...
08/03/2025

We had a fabulous (if frantic) day at the market, with folks lining up to buy our farm goodies. In no time, we went from this, to the photo in the comments below.

Wednesday market. Dragon carrots; San Marzano, Beefsteak, Rio Grand, Arkansas Traveler, and grape tomatoes, six kinds of...
07/30/2025

Wednesday market. Dragon carrots; San Marzano, Beefsteak, Rio Grand, Arkansas Traveler, and grape tomatoes, six kinds of fresh peppers, various dried or ground peppers, tomato powder, cucumbers, huckleberry jam, and strawberry popcorn. Sorry, no coyote balls (too tired after long, hot days in the fields).

Wednesday is always a very small market, but we still sold out of dragon carrots and huckleberry jam.

Address

66 Bad Coyote Place
Corrales, NM
87048

Website

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