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    Galloping Goat Pumpkin Patch

    4.5 (28 reviews)
    InexpensivePumpkin Patches
    Closed 9:00 am - 6:00 pm

    Galloping Goat Pumpkin Patch Photos

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    Virginia G.

    We have taken our kids to Galloping Goats for the last 6 years and every year it gets better! They put together this amazing family-friendly event for the community to simply have fun and enjoy each other! Not only is the cost affordable, they are open for a while so you have plenty of options to visit. We can't wait to visit next year!!

    Patchy asphalt that causes littles to trip and fall.
    Alayna B.

    Highly recommended for little kids! Newly rebranded to Galloping GOAT. With a little over a week left for pumpkin patches I definitely recommend this one. There are so many activities to keep little hands and feet busy without worrying what they might get into. Be careful the asphalt is in disrepair in a lot of places. Unsteady walkers will probably get their hands cut up from falls, as did mine. We took kids ages 6, 4, and 1.5. They all found fun things to do and were solidly entertained for the 3 hours we were there. Some highlights were the bike races for two age groups, the little themed houses (their fave part), mini golf, and the goats (but be aware of hands. They bite!) This is a pumpkin patch that is fun for all, and very well thought out.

    Dominica R.

    I took my kids to galloping grace pumpkin patch. We had gone in the past. This year was a little more pricey. Everything was extra, extra, extra! The work they put into the whole thing was nice. Petting zoo was the reason we came it's extra to go inside the fence. Which there are only a couple goats which were already full. The paintball area was cool and was worth paying extra. My son loved that. We liked the four square area as well. We just got a few small pumpkins on the way out because again you have to pay extra on top of admission to get a pumpkin.

    Jaime C.

    They've really done a great job here. Plenty of fun stuff to entertain the littles: bowling, hay bales, mini maze, corn pit, mini tractors, water duck races, animals, photo op nooks all around. This is a great alternative to McCalls...don't get me wrong, love me some McCalls, but if you can't make the trek to Moriarity, this is a great local option and a wonderful community program.

    Howie K.

    I gotta begin by stating that this pumpkin patch is a metaphoric microcosm of the city of Rio Rancho. They take this big stretch of tar parking lot and cover it with color, straw bales, games, a maze, a slide, pumpkin gallery, pig racetrack and indeed, a mud pie kitchen, completely constructing something out of literally nothing. Which is Rio Rancho. Nothing out there, no water, no trees, but plenty of beachfront, so what the heck, let's build a city. Darn you, working-class parents, why did you deny me Country? I'm assuming I can blame my Big City childhood for never encountering a corn sandbox, my entire life. This pumpkin patch hosts a huge vat of corn kernels, and once I got in, I really didn't want to get out. I buried my kid in the corn and then she did the same thing to me and then a bunch of other kids got in on the burial, it was a good time, as long as I didn't concentrate on the idea that I was quite likely swimming in a germ swamp. But that price point, boy, what a rip-off. Three entire dollars per person? Supporting a nonprofit that supports community agriculture and food recovery in the state with the highest child poverty rate in the country? How dare you. It's a great experience connected to a terrific organization and the pumpkin selection is enormous and affordable. If you make an annual pilgrimage to McCall's every year, don't change your itinerary, but add this place to your autumn to-do list. As of November 1st, it'll be a mirage.

    Fun Pumpkin Patch
    Avram L.

    The Best Pumpkin Patch. Easy to find. Inexpensive. Plenty of fun activities for kids. Lots of pumpkins to pick from. It was very enjoyable. Thanks for reading. The Bike Chaplain

    Tiffany A.

    This is such a great event. I love this organization and how the community comes together for this event every year. Admission is free; you only buy anything extra. We used to go to McCalls every year but now we keep it local with Galloping Grace. It has been a pleasure to watch this event grow into what it is today. Hoping to find out more about their Ranch Camp!

    The painted hay bails....enough said. They are all just too cute!!
    Amanda S.

    This place is amazing, Enough said....but I won't stop there :) the entire program that the Youth Ranch offers is awesome in itself and the pumpkin patch that they do every fall is just a huge bonus. Our family could spend hours there every weekend (if the kids had their way) it's safe, it's free, it's fun. The pumpkins are top notch, the animals are great, the games and activities are awesome! The painted hay bails are amazing!!! Such a great program that these wonderful people provide for our community. Love it!

    Tons of FANTASTIC  pumpkins for sale! And hay to climb on.
    Amy Z.

    My family LOVES the Galloping Grace Youth Pumpkin Patch. We go there Every Year! It's FREE!! We spend the whole day there! My toddler loves it. My teen nephews love it. My husband loves it. There is something for everyone of all ages and it's fantastic! They have so many great farm animals. Wonderful staff. A REALLY big, fully shaded, corn pit! There is bowling. There is mini golf. There is basketball. Sling shot tennis. Mini pedal tractors. Mud kitchen. Rubber duck race. Pumpkin decorating. Pig baby shower. Ggyr.org is such a great organization. They use the donations they receive to do wonderful things with all the children in New Mexico. I highly recommend taking the drive to go visit them. You will have a really great day with your family. :)

    The Tube Slide
    Ricardo S.

    My Great Grandkids have gone here at least three times, a true family friendly event with a variety of activities. The nonprofit Galloping Grace Youth Ranch offers and promotes programs in which children are involved in raising animals, growing crops, exploring the outdoors, and enhancing the community. They did add a slight admission fee this year, but well worth it!

    This was so fun, lots of pumpkins to take pictures of and stuff for kids to do. Best of all its FREE!!!! Awesome

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    Max W.

    Thank you so much for visiting and leaving such a kind comment.

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    3 years ago

    It is fun for children and adults would recommend loved the petting zoo also loved feeding the goats

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    Max W.

    So glad you had a good time. Thank you so much for visiting.

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    Ask the Community - Galloping Goat Pumpkin Patch

    Review Highlights - Galloping Goat Pumpkin Patch

    They have a petting zoo, a corn maze, a corn pit and lots of other fun things for the kids to do.

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    Seasonal Adventures Pumpkin Patch

    Seasonal Adventures Pumpkin Patch

    3.3(3 reviews)
    11.2 miNorth Valley/Los Ranchos

    All of a sudden, one day in early October, this pumpkin patch sprang up on an undeveloped plot of…read moredirt on the southeast corner of Coors and Montano. Driving by, I had so many questions: Was this a local effort, benefitting local farmers or charitable organizations? I mean, it just seemed so random. In my experience, pumpkin patches take place on farms, or they're organized by church groups, providing a sort of down home country experience, with hay rides and pig races, that sorta thing. So when I got home, I checked out their website, and now that we've visited, here's my understanding of this, um, experience: + Not local, "Seasonal Adventures is currently the largest privately owned pumpkin and Christmas tree retailer in the country." Yes, we're getting a Christmas tree farm in November, evidently. + Doesn't benefit local farmers, the pumpkins are shipped out of Ventura, California. + Not seeing anything benefitting any charity, but I'll throw in this asterisk: This company does try to accommodate people with special needs. That's important, because many kids and adults simply cannot attend festivities like these, due to sensory issues. Good job, guys. That said, my inner swindle skeptic is hollering flim-flam after dropping $60 on two kids during just one hour. A trip down an inflatable slide, just one, cost a dollar. Games were free, but prizes -- every kid wins -- were poor quality and pricey, a plastic beach ball ran three bones. The cost of a pumpkin? Starting at $11. In the end, this didn't deliver any of the charm of a legit autumn festival, it was understaffed, and we felt deceived. At the same price point you can spend a day at McCall's, and support a great local farm.

    Really cute pop up pumpkin patch with some fun bouncy houses. I would have liked to have seen more…read moreactivities for toddlers as well as a place to purchase snacks or goodies for the kiddos.

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    Seasonal Adventures Pumpkin Patch

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    Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm - Pickled Jar - Asparagus, Cucumber, Onion, Beets, Carrots, Mushrooms, seasonal variety

    Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm

    4.4(573 reviews)
    11.2 miNorth Valley/Los Ranchos
    $$

    Stopped by the lobby, really more of a living room, to inquire about the historic inn and rooms…read more Food is served at Campo and there's also a Farm Shop that serves coffee/tea/pastries and a library bar. I appreciated Elizabeth's service at the inn in providing room rates, pictures, and information.

    I was in town from Denver visiting for my nephew's graduation. We had reservations for a Friday…read moreevening. When we walked onto the patio and took in those sweeping views of the Sandias, I was ready to love this place. Los Poblanos has all the ingredients of a truly special dining experience: a gorgeous setting, a thoughtful farm-to-table ethos, and a menu that promises something above the ordinary. Which is exactly why the evening's annoying missteps were so disappointing. Service was well intentioned but unpolished. Our waiter seemed overwhelmed and, at times, unfamiliar with the menu -- a problem when guests are asking genuine questions about the food and wine. We ordered bread which came before our drinks were served. Wine service was inconsistent. I ordered an Albariño by the glass - 6 oz. My sister ordered the Cabernet listed on the menu as a recommended pairing for her entrée, priced at $11. After we placed our drink orders, the waiter returned to inform her that the menu price was incorrect -- the wine was actually $18. She agreed to proceed. He then asked whether she wanted "a half glass or a full glass," which is an oddly imprecise question at a restaurant whose menu specifies pours in 3, 6, and 9 oz increments. She said half glass. What arrived was 3 oz of wine in a small serving carafe, which the waiter simply poured into her glass -- no bottle presented, no taste offered. My own Albariño, by contrast, was brought to the table in the bottle with a proper taste before pouring. The disparity in service between the two of us was striking. A simple, clear statement -- "3 oz of this wine is $18, not $11; would you still like it?" -- would have resolved everything cleanly. Instead, the vague "half or full glass" framing left my sister without the information she needed to make an informed choice. For what it's worth, the wine itself was extraordinarily tannic -- borderline undrinkable -- and I would have sent it back. My nephew ordered a top shelf whiskey. The waiter told him "we don't have that". My nephew said "it's on your menu" to which the waiter responded "oh, let me check on that". There seemed to be too many instances of the waiter running back to the bar to check on stuff. Anyway, it was available. The waiter apologized. We ordered the bread which was served before our drinks arrived. Food took about an hour which is fine - I don't have an issue with that but during that time we never saw the waiter again. I ordered the soup of the day - potato and leek which was delicious. Followed by the blackberry salad, which was my main course. Both arrived simultaneously, with the salad placed in front of me and the soup set to the side as an afterthought. At a restaurant at this price point, the expectation that soup precedes salad is not an eccentricity -- it is simply correct service. When I expressed my surprise, the servers seemed genuinely puzzled, which suggests this may be a training gap rather than an isolated incident. As for the salad itself -- it was pleasant, but pleasant is not enough here. The blackberry salad was the kind of thing you might enjoy at a well-run casual chain: competently assembled, inoffensive, and forgettable. At a farm-to-table restaurant with access to exceptional local ingredients, I expect the plate to reflect that -- more intentional presentation, more layered flavors, something that is more elevated than what was presented. This one didn't. The gap between the setting and what landed on the table was wider than it should have been. My sister and nephews ordered the filet mignon and rib eye. Both arrived pre-sliced -- a presentation trend that has made its way into fine dining, though one that divides opinion. My concern, beyond personal preference, is practical: sliced meat loses heat faster, and at roughly $80 per entrée, guests should receive their steak in the condition that best showcases it. The quality was good, not exceptional. Los Poblanos is a restaurant with genuine promise and a setting that few can match. The concept is right; the execution needs work. The issues I encountered -- inconsistent wine service, course sequencing, and a discombobulated waiter-- are not kitchen problems. They are fixable. I hope the restaurant takes that seriously, because the bones here are excellent and the experience should be too.

    Photos
    Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm - Lobby / reception.

    Lobby / reception.

    Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm
    Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm - Espadin Queen

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    Espadin Queen

    Tiny Grocer ABQ - Menu

    Tiny Grocer ABQ

    4.1(23 reviews)
    14.8 miOld Town

    First the positive then the negative. The negatives were not enough to take away from the 5 star…read moreyelp rating here but there is some low hanging fruit here that would meaningfully improve the customer experience. The food and coffee here aren't excellent. No question. Surprisingly strong spice level for an old town location, good range of New Mexican AND coffee shop menu options for breakfast and lunch. I had the enchiladas and added eggs and bacon, which is essentially Huevos Rancheros the way it is served in bowl form. Potatoes, beans, and chile flavors all complimented each other well, nice garnish and nice presentation. Had house coffee which is SOLID. The service style is counter ordering with a number, which for me is a great system. Negative - the coffee service with food is a bit confusing. Coffee comes in a paper cup for everyone apparently, which feels a bit sloppy. Mugs would be really nice. Also, because coffee is served with meal by table delivery, coffee takes a long time to get to the table. I personally like my coffee immediately and intravenously, so this was frustrating. The patio is lovely - the tables are weird. There are only large group tables, no small tables. BIGGEST Negative - parking. I looked at the social media, menu, website, and the parking problem is not addressed anywhere that I could easily find. The adjacent city lot is priced for tourists - $12 flat rate. Given that the numerous other breakfast options in the area have free and close parking, in our lamentably car-driven culture, Tiny Grocer is at a big disadvantage. I'm sure this is a recurring and difficult problem, and I would suggest blasting a solution on all social media, pinned posts, first line in bio, menu, everywhere. People could park on 18th st, 19th st, next to Tiguex park, and take a short walk to a lovely experience.

    The Tiny Grocer has a lunch counter making a variety of items with the concentration on quality…read moreingredients in the center of Albuquerque in Old Town. Great tourist stop as well as a known eatery for locals. They have indoor seating for those really hot days in summer, but my favorite is their shaded outdoor patio. There are a lot of tourists here and locals can eat great food while being entertained by the steady stream of Old Town visitors. I had the Smash Burger with a side salad and could barely finish it. I didn't partake, but alcoholic beverages are on order should you decide. I highly recommend this place also for the very friendly owner and staff.

    Photos
    Tiny Grocer ABQ - Parking lot side entrance

    Parking lot side entrance

    Tiny Grocer ABQ - Tiny Grocer ABQ, in Old Town

    Tiny Grocer ABQ, in Old Town

    Tiny Grocer ABQ - Outdoor seating

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    Outdoor seating

    Galloping Goat Pumpkin Patch - pumpkinpatches - Updated May 2026

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