(Photo courtesy of Agave Heritage Festival)

Agave Heritage Festival returns to Tucson with tastings, education, and cultural exchange


March 12, 2026
By Tucson Foodie

Tucson will celebrate desert culture during the Agave Heritage Festival Tucson this April.

The multi-day festival highlights agave as a plant, spirit, and cultural tradition across the U.S.–Mexico border. Organizers will present educational talks, tastings, film screenings, and community events across Tucson. The event continues to position Tucson as a global hub for agave heritage and desert food culture.

Meanwhile, the festival also welcomes producers, researchers, chefs, and cultural leaders for four days of conversation and celebration.

Agave Heritage Festival Tucson blends education, culture, and community

The Agave Heritage Festival Tucson focuses on the plant’s ecological and cultural significance in the Sonoran Desert.

Programming begins Thursday with an agave planting event at Mission Garden. The hands-on activity highlights agave’s historic role in desert ecology and regional foodways.

Later that evening, the festival will present the Howard Scott Gentry Award. Organizers will honor botanist Dr. Wendy Hodgson for her decades of leadership in agave and desert plant research. Her public lecture will explore agave history from traditional knowledge to modern conservation.

Throughout the weekend, the Field Notes education series will examine desert agriculture, heritage food traditions, and sustainable agave cultivation.

Sessions will feature collaborations with:

  • University of Arizona College of Social and Behavioral Sciences
  • University of Arizona Center for Latin American Studies
  • Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum

Speakers will discuss regenerative agriculture, desert ecosystems, and the future of agave farming in the borderlands.

Tastings and agave spirits experiences across Tucson

The Agave Heritage Festival Tucson will host tastings and cocktail events across bars and restaurants throughout the city.

One highlight takes place Thursday, April 9 at Bar Crisol. The evening features a guided tasting with Tequila Ocho and Mezcal Vago that explores terroir and production philosophy.

After the tasting, the bar will host a late-night takeover with cocktails, curated flights, and agave pours.

Meanwhile, the festival’s signature tasting event, Mexico in a Bottle: Fiesta Grande, returns with an extensive lineup of agave producers.

Featured producers include:

  • Origen Raíz
  • Don Fulano
  • Siembra Spirits
  • Rufina Mezcal
  • Montaraz Bacanora
  • Siete Misterios
  • Maquey Spirits
  • Cazcanes
  • Mezcal de Leyenda

Across the weekend, attendees can also join more than a dozen guided tastings and cocktail classes hosted at Tucson venues.

Participating locations include:

  • Agave House
  • Sonoran House
  • Tough Luck Club
  • Nana’s Kitchen
  • Batch
  • Tap & Bottle
  • Westbound

Film screenings explore agave traditions and communities

The Agave Heritage Festival Tucson also features documentary screenings that explore the people behind agave spirits.

Films will highlight agave producers, traditional knowledge, and cultural preservation across Mexico and the borderlands.

Featured films include:

  • La Ciénega
  • Las Hijas del Maguey
  • Raicilla Smugglers

Organizers will announce screening locations and schedules soon.

Spirit of Sonora highlights regional agave culture

Spirit of Sonora returns as a major community gathering during the Agave Heritage Festival Tucson.

The free event celebrates Sonoran agave culture through tastings, music, art, and hands-on activities. Organizers will present the program in partnership with the Tucson Folk Festival and Art State Arizona.

Guests can meet bacanora producers and learn about regional agave traditions.

Participating producers include:

  • Los Cantiles 1905
  • Montaraz Bacanora
  • El Pima Bacanora
  • Bacanora Hasta La Muerte
  • Bacanora Pasión Sonorense
  • Bacanora Cola Blanca

The event invites attendees to explore how agave connects food, ecology, and cultural identity across the desert region.

Cross-border agave travel experience expands festival

This year’s Agave Heritage Festival Tucson also introduces a limited cross-border travel program.

In collaboration with Borderlandia, the Ruta de Bacanora tour will take 14 participants from Nogales, Arizona, into Sonora, Mexico.

The three-night experience will introduce guests to agave landscapes, producers, and regional communities tied to bacanora production.

Honoring agave producers and tradition

At its core, the Agave Heritage Festival centers the people who produce agave spirits.

The festival welcomes mezcaleros, mezcaleras, and sotol producers who travel to Tucson to share their knowledge and traditions.

Confirmed participants include:

  • Luis Carlos Vasquez Sr. and Luis Carlos Valdez Jr., Del Maguey
  • Miguel Partida, Chacolo
  • Salvador Isidiro Fernández, Lazo de Mi Vida
  • Karolina Chávez Fernández, Sotol Fernández
  • Hilda Verónica Torres Rodríguez, Lechuguilla Omawari

Their participation transforms the festival into a space for dialogue, education, and cultural exchange.

Founded in 2008, the Agave Heritage Festival has grown into a citywide celebration of agave culture and desert heritage.

Learn more and explore the full schedule at agaveheritagefestival.com.

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