Camp Verde Agriculture
The need for Agriculture over the years

The richly watered Verde Valley of Central Arizona has served as a breadbasket for humans for over 2,000 years. The earliest farmers were the Hohokam people, the same culture that once thrived in Phoenix’s Salt River Valley. The Hohokam developed extensive networks of irrigation canals that transformed the bottomlands of both valleys into rich agricultural areas. These canals serve as a powerful reminder of the Hohokam and their relationship to the land.

The Sinagua people entered the region around 800 AD. The Sinagua continued to use irrigation canals, but they also mastered the art of dry-farming beans, maize, squash, and other crops. The Sinagua people flourished along the Verde and its tributaries, and are responsible for the construction of Tuzigoot and Montezuma Castle, landmarks that still grace the Verde Valley today. The collapse of the Sinagua culture around 1400 AD opened the region up for new settlers. The Yavapai and then the Apache peoples arrived. Hunter-gatherers for the most part, the two cultures nevertheless continued a tradition of using the river’s vast floodplain to plant corn and other crops.

In February 1865, a group of non-native farmers from the mining camps near Prescott arrived at the confluence of West Clear Creek and the Verde River. These farmers followed in the tradition of the Verde Valley’s earliest agriculturalists — they dug irrigation canals and began applying water to bottomland. By the turn of the 20th century, settlers maintained 68 irrigation canals tapping into the Verde River and its tributaries—Beaver Creek, West Clear Creek, Oak Creek and Sycamore Creek— that watered nearly 8,000 acres of pasture, fields, and orchards.

Verde Valley farmers market
Verde Valley farmers market
Verde Valley farmers market

Here are a some places to pick up a few local Verde Grown favorites in Camp Verde:

  • Sinagua Malt
  • Verde Valley Farmer’s Market
  • Roadside Vegetable Stands
  • Hauser Sweet Corn Stand
  • Summer Place Pecan Farms

Today, that agricultural legacy remains, although much of the water that formerly irrigated farms now waters turf and trees in the lush neighborhoods that wind through Camp Verde’s green belt. The 40 remaining irrigation ditches still water around 6,000 acres of greenspace, including production orchards, farms and gardens. The Valley’s famous sweet corn and luscious tomatoes are known statewide and its farmers market and numerous roadside stands bring visitors to town all summer long.

Verde Grown is the brand that Verde Valley farmers, ranchers, food producers, and food advocates have chosen to tell their two thousand year old story of resilience. Verde Grown represents and celebrates food producers from the hard-working communities in the Verde Valley that remain connected to their roots in agriculture and stewardship of the land and river. Proudly, they continue to nurture the fruits, vegetables, cattle, pecans, wine, beer, wool and other crops that have been cultivated in the heart of Arizona for generations.

Verde Grown producers strengthen the resiliency and economic vitality of the Verde Valley and those who continue to thrive off the land and the river that has sustained the region for thousands of years.

Meet Verde Grown Producers

Buy Verde Valley-grown food, and get to know your local farmers, ranchers, and food artisans, with the Verde Grown program.

Are you a Verde Grown Producer?

Proudly showcase that you are continuing the tradition of nurturing fruits, vegetables, cattle, pecans, wine, beer, wool and/or other crops in the heart of Arizona as a Verde Grown producer. With the Verde Grown tool kit, you’ll have everything you need to effectively market the Verde Grown brand. The document includes Facebook profile and cover images, downloadable logos and labels to distribute, branded fonts and a customizable flyer template to use at your place of businesses or at farmers markets.

Wine Tasting in Camp Verde

In the last decade, Arizona has been recognized as a producer of great wine. With the combination of the perfect soil and the ability to irrigate, the Verde Valley has become a popular wine region in Arizona, and is now home to over a dozen wineries and vineyards. In Camp Verde, we are proud to have two family owned and operated vineyards only a short distance from downtown.

Ignacio Mesa, owner of Clear Creek Vineyard and Winery, was one of the first wine makers to recognize the potential the Verde Valley has to offer as a grape region. Starting over 10 years ago, Mesa has been using organic farming methods to grow his grapes that he then makes into his Rio Claro Wine. His winery and vineyard are open Wednesday through Saturday for guests to stop by and enjoy a wine tasting.

Salt Mine Wine planted grapes and developed their own vineyard and winery on a historic farm off Salt Mine Road. They have released a limited production of vintage  Arizona wines. Their tasting room is open every Saturday and holidays.

Annexed into the Town of Camp Verde in September of 2020, Alcantera Vineyards is the newest addition to the Camp Verde winery family. Alcantera Vineyard began in 2004, when founders Barbara and Bob Predmore recognized that the soil and climate in the Verde Valley resembled the wine making regions of Italy and France. Since its inception, Alcantera has grown dramatically and now has over 20,000 vines, offering 17 different varietals. A trip to this little slice of paradise offers peaceful surroundings which include the vineyards, a grass picnic area, access to the Verde River, and much, much more!

Go for a Wine Tasting Tour

Get to know the Verde Valley Wine region by taking a wine tasting tour! You can explore the various wineries and vineyards on the Verde Valley Wine Trail and create your own wine tour, or book a wine tour with one of the many tour guides in the area.

Farm to Table

Many of our restaurants source their produce and meats from local farms. With an abundance of sun all year round, and access to the Verde River, local farms can grow a variety of vegetables and fruits making this region seem more than just a desert.