Happyville Community Farm

Happyville Community Farm We are a nonprofit urban farm growing and sharing to build a healthier community!

06/11/2026

Due to bad weather and lack of staff, farmstand is closed early today! See you next week from 4-7 like normal!

Brave the wind and come on down to Farmstand today from 4-7 for some of the best produce in town! This week we have: Cau...
06/10/2026

Brave the wind and come on down to Farmstand today from 4-7 for some of the best produce in town!
This week we have:
Cauliflower, Broccoli, Kohlrabi, Tender Baby Cabbage, Rhubarb, Spinach, Scallions, Tokyo Turnips, Fresh Peas (snap and shelling), Radishes, Bok Choy, Fennel, and Garlic Scapes!
Garlic Scapes are one of my favorite vegetables ever! Packed with fresh spring garlic taste with just enough heat to make it exciting, they are great in almost everything savory.
Lettuce, Kale, and herbs available upon request.
We also have local honey and three Ristras!
💨 640 S Saturn Ave, Idaho Falls, 4-7 p.m. 💨

So, I am unfortunately late enough making this post that we're already out of a few things, but we still have plenty to ...
06/03/2026

So, I am unfortunately late enough making this post that we're already out of a few things, but we still have plenty to choose from!
We have radishes, spinach, arugula, kale, Tokyo turnips, daikon radishes, rhubarb, and bok choy, as well as fresh lettuce and herbs on request!

We're Back! Not that we ever left, but Farmstand is open for the season! Every Wednesday 4-7 P.M. at 640 S Saturn Drive ...
06/03/2026

We're Back! Not that we ever left, but Farmstand is open for the season!
Every Wednesday 4-7 P.M. at 640 S Saturn Drive Idaho Falls.
Stay tuned to find out what we'll have for tonights Farmstand!

Stop by for your spring greens at our special sneak-peek farmstand for donors and supporters of the farm! Aside from som...
05/27/2026

Stop by for your spring greens at our special sneak-peek farmstand for donors and supporters of the farm! Aside from some awesome snacks, we have lettuce, daikon radish, rhubarb, fennel, kale, bok choy, Tokyo turnips, regular radishes, and some of the largest golden radishes I've ever seen! We also have spinach, arugula, broccoli, cauliflower, honey, and pickled jalapenos.

We have a newsletter with SPECIAL NEWS for our DONORS!
05/26/2026

We have a newsletter with SPECIAL NEWS for our DONORS!

Happyville Farm grows food, community, and connections! Each year we provide around 5,000 pounds of incredibly healthy, tasty food to our community soup kitchens, food pantries and low-income neighbors -- as well as teaching hundreds of people how to grow and enjoy their own fresh healthy food,...

05/23/2026

Diversity is life. Life gives us diversity. Let’s respect and protect it. After all — nature can keep going without humans, but humans can’t keep going without nature.

Lilies coming into bloom in our high tunnel. Pictured April 21st — full of buds despite the chilly nights (protected by ...
05/23/2026

Lilies coming into bloom in our high tunnel. Pictured April 21st — full of buds despite the chilly nights (protected by the high tunnel so they didn’t get damaged by any frosts). Then yesterday, and now today!

05/12/2026

Minnesota looked at 8,000 yards and saw not lawns, but a corridor. The state just opened grants for its Lawns to Legumes pollinator habitat program, and the design is smarter than a typical rebate check.

Homeowners and renters can get up to $400 reimbursed for converting lawn to native plants, but the program prioritizes projects that connect to existing habitat patches.

The goal is not just 8,000 random gardens. It is a statewide bee corridor that pollinators can actually travel through without hitting dead zones of turf grass and chemical treatment.

The inclusion of renters matters. Most conservation rebates target property owners. Minnesota recognized that roughly one-third of the state's residents rent, and their yards are just as capable of producing habitat.

A renter with landlord permission can tear out a front lawn, plant prairie dropseed, purple prairie clover, and butterfly w**d, and get paid back. Over 8,000 yards already joined.

The plants are legumes and forbs that fix nitrogen, build soil, and bloom in succession from April through September so there is never a hungry week for bees. The program is funded through the Minnesota Board of Water and Soil Resources, which means it ties pollinator health directly to water quality and soil stability.

It is a corridor in the most literal sense — a connected path of living infrastructure running through neighborhoods that used to be ecological dead ends.

Address

640 S. Saturn Avenue
Idaho Falls, ID
83402

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