Tag: classes

  • Spring Awakening

    Spring Awakening

    Spring in Heber Valley arrives in a rush of green. Daffodils and tulips pop up like cheerful exclamation points, warming our hearts right along with the sun. It’s the season that makes you want to get your hands dirty—in the very best way.

    Here’s a fun gardening secret: flowers and vegetables love growing together. Interplanting blooms with edibles boosts beauty and pollination. So why not tuck a few pots onto your patio or add a couple of raised beds to your yard? Even with a busy life, starting—or expanding—a garden is absolutely possible. Yes, really.

    Growing food at home—whether in the ground or in raised beds—builds more than nutrition. It builds confidence. And it doesn’t have to be complicated or labor-intensive. With a few simple adjustments, you can create a wildly beautiful, productive garden in a single season, growing a surprising amount of food in a relatively small space.

    The real secret to a thriving, organic garden is soil nutrition. Rich compost makes all the difference. Making your own compost is easy, inexpensive, and often better than anything you can buy—without the risk of burning crops, which can happen with chemical fertilizers.

    One of the best soil boosters? Well-rotted manure. Horse and cattle owners often have years-old piles they’re happy to share, while chicken and goat owners clean pens regularly and usually give away their nutrient-rich manure. Gently rake or lightly shovel it into the top few inches of soil. For an added boost, you can spray or sprinkle organic amendments like seaweed extract or earthworm castings.

    A light dusting of Epsom salts and sulfur pellets can also help. These inexpensive additions gently lower soil pH, making minerals more available to plants and encouraging stronger growth and better fruit production.

    Compost ingredients are everywhere. Dried or green plants, grass clippings, fallen leaves, pine needles—even weeds—are packed with essential nutrients. Old hay and straw make excellent mulch, especially when layered 12 to 18 inches deep to suppress weeds. Worried about seeds hiding in straw? Just pile it up and water it first—any sprouts will die before the straw ever reaches your garden.

    Sawdust or shredded wood chips encourage beneficial fungi and bacteria that help deliver more nutrients and water to your plants—sometimes up to seven times more. You can plant right into two or three inches of mulch by scattering seeds in wide rows or creating close rows with a hoe and lightly covering them with soil.

    Wide rows—anywhere from one to four feet across—are ideal. Space plants so they touch at maturity, which helps retain soil moisture and keeps roots happy. Plants with moist roots thrive, and underground networks of beneficial fungi even help them share resources with one another.

    You can mix compost ingredients all at once or layer them in place—the earthworms will happily do the rest. Over time, that thick mulch settles down to about four to six inches. As plants grow, keep topping it off with fresh mulch: lawn clippings, pine needles from a neighbor’s tree, or sawdust from a woodshop. With healthy mulch, watering just once a week is often enough to keep plants green, flowering, and thriving.

    This year, my husband and I are transforming a garden area east of our high-tunnel greenhouse near the creek. With a small pavilion and lawn, it’s a perfect spot to blend beauty and productivity. Protected from the harsh afternoon sun, it’s ideal for pollinators, too. We’ve planted a generous three-foot-wide row of black-eyed Susans and wildflowers to draw bees right into the greenhouse.

    Where we once grew greens and herbs on landscape fabric, we’re now planting potatoes, onions, carrots, and beets. Between wide rows, we’ll tuck in chives, leeks, and bush beans to support soil health and add nitrogen. Across the creek, where orchard grass has stubbornly held on for decades, we’ll reclaim the space with landscape fabric, compost, and towering sunflowers—followed by corn and black oil sunflowers—to create a stunning, productive wall.

    Along the stream, wildflowers and herbs will thrive in the cool, moist air. Lemon balm, spearmint, peppermint, and kitchen staples like basil, rosemary, and oregano will fill the space with color and fragrance. We also love scattering seed mixes under fruit trees—adding charm while improving tree health with nitrogen-fixing greens and groundcover.

    Near the fences, tall herbs like borage mingle with easy-to-harvest edibles such as red amaranth, chia, and flax. Vertical arches made from cattle panels support pole beans and winter squash, while cucumbers and tomatoes climb fences. Large squash happily wander beneath fruit trees, right where they belong.

    A garden like this feeds more than your table. It nourishes body and soul, brings joy to family life, and offers the quiet comfort of knowing you can grow your own delicious, highly nutritious food. Spring is calling—and it’s a beautiful time to answer.

    Heber Valley Self-Reliance Group

    hebervalleyready.org

    Wasatch Fire District
    251 E 1200 S – Heber City

    ALL COMMUNITY CLASSES ARE FREE

    MARCH 2026

    Steady Minds in Crisis
    Psychological Approach to First Aid

    Don’t Go Hungry
    Planning for Food Security

    Everyday Emergencies
    First Aid for People & Pets

    Your Bags are Packed
    From Getting Home to Never Going Back

    APRIL 2026

    Liquid LIFELINE
    Water Security in a Crisis

    Nourishment & Morale
    Food Storage & Off-Grid Cooking

    Neurological Emergencies
    Seizures, Strokes, & Sudden Neurological Events

    May 2026

    PANDEMICS
    Preparedness & Shelter in Place

    WHEN BABIES CAN’T WAIT
    Emergency Childbirth

    POWER & LIGHT IN EMERGENCIES
    Light Sources When the Grid is Down

  • Introduction and Ready to Use Resources for Heber

    Introduction and Ready to Use Resources for Heber

    In the Heber Valley, winter still lingers in the landscape, and our yards sit quietly in that in-between season—resting, but not for long. Before buds begin to swell and spring takes hold, this is the ideal time to think ahead and set your landscape up for a healthy, successful growing season.

    This month, we’re highlighting timely tips for pruning ornamental trees and sharing details about upcoming free educational landscaping classes at the Wasatch County Library. Whether you’re maintaining a mature yard or dreaming up a new design, this is the season to learn, plan, and prepare for growth.

    Monthly landscaping blurb:
    “The best time of year to prune ornamental trees is the latter part of winter, while the trees are still dormant and buds have not yet begun to swell.  This causes less stress on the trees, and it’s easy to see the branching patterns without leaves.  Prune out dead and diseased branches, potentially hazardous branches, and crossing or crowded branches to maintain tree health and improve form.  Interested in adding more trees to your yard?  See how you could receive a treebate while participating in the Utah Water Savers landscape incentive program: https://www.utahwatersavers.com/.”

    Upcoming Free educational landscaping classes in your area:
    Our free educational landscaping classes are available to anyone and any skill level. Throughout the growing season we will invite experts from across academia, professional services, etc. to speak on a variety of topics. Central Utah Water staff will also teach classes that help those who are interested in participating in our rebate/incentive programs ultimately succeed in that endeavor.
    Visit the website for the complete class schedule: https://cuwcd.gov/classes.html


    Topic: Qualifying for a Landscape Incentive
    Date: Saturday, April 11, 2026

    Time: 10:30 – 12:00 pm
    Location: Wasatch County Library
    Registration: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/qualifying-for-a-landscape-incentive-tickets-1981452918017


    Topic: Localscapes: Creating Your Ideal Utah Yard
    Date: Saturday, April 18, 2026

    Time: 10:30 – 12:00 pm
    Location: Wasatch County Library

    Registration: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/localscapes-creating-your-ideal-utah-yard-tickets-1981453302166


    Topic: Planting Bed Design
    Date: Saturday, April 25, 2026

    Time: 10:30 – 11:30 am
    Location: Wasatch County Library
    Registration: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/planting-bed-design-tickets-1981453884909

  • A little creativity + imagination Inspiration Haven

    A little creativity + imagination Inspiration Haven

    AmberLee Shuler has always enjoyed creating, but it wasn’t until she started taking art classes in middle school and high school that she realized just how much she loved art! Painting with acrylics, watercolors, and oils, drawing, calligraphy, she enjoyed it all. While taking calligraphy in 10th grade, her teacher encouraged her to try out pottery. At first she was hesitant. AmberLee explains, “I didn’t think I’d really like pottery, but my calligraphy teacher was also the pottery teacher and I really liked him as a teacher.” So, AmberLee signed up. “I took pottery in 11th grade and absolutely loved it! I actually had two pottery classes in 12th grade because I loved it so much.” At the same time she was also taking photography and graphic design and had decided to pursue a degree in graphic design once she graduated.

    While in college she took several art classes including, drawing, 2D art, art history, and pottery, and was well on her way to earning her associates degree when, as often happens in life, she changed her mind. Instead of earning a degree in graphic arts, AmberLee earned her bachelor’s in elementary education, and began teaching. After her first year, she took a one-year break to stay home with her son. Still thinking about art, she decided to teach a few art classes out of her house before going back to teaching school full time; which she would do for another six years.

    In early 2022 AmberLee and her husband went out on a date to a pottery studio, and that changed everything. She explains, “While we were at that class, I was like I want to do this! I want my own studio. Originally, I thought I’d just have a pottery studio, but I also wanted to do paints and other art.” The couple went to a few different art classes — just to make sure — but AmberLee was certain. She continues, “I was like, ‘Ya, this is what I want to do,’ and that just sort of started the ball rolling. This was literally like January/February of this year that I decided I wanted to take the leap; and actually open an art studio instead of just doing classes out of my house.” AmberLee laughs as she shares that once the decision was made they immediately started purchasing supplies and looking for a place. In March they found a quaint basement ‘studio’ that they renovated and by April they were opening their doors; welcoming all to Inspiration Haven Art Studio!

    What can you expect to find when you walk into the studio? A lot of inspiration, a lot of fun, and a lot of ways to create! With clay being AmberLee’s favorite medium, it comes as no surprise that she plans to have a pottery room in the back of the studio. But for now, Inspiration Haven offers art classes, paint nights, and private parties for families, birthdays, and corporate events. Combining her love for art and elementary education, AmberLee also offers 4-week and 12-week kid’s art classes for ages 3-15. AmberLee teaches the fundamentals of art and the kid’s get to explore all types of mediums. AmberLee explains, “We work with clay and pastels, we paint with watercolors and acrylics, we explore all avenues. The kids come once a week for an hour-and-a-half and we just have fun and learn all kinds of art.” At the end of the 12 weeks Inspiration Haven turns into an art gallery. “We give the kids an opportunity to have their art work displayed in a more formal setting. It’s fun for them to see their work on display with everybody else’s.” The event is open to the public so friends, family, and community members can all enjoy what they’ve accomplished.

    AmberLee has accomplished quite a bit in just a few short months and enjoys helping others fall in love with art too. For her paint nights, anyone, from expert to never touched a paint brush before are welcome. AmberLee shares, “I guide them through a painting. I teach them technique a little bit too, but it’s not necessarily a formal art class. It’s more of an opportunity to come paint a picture and have fun, have a friends or family night out and enjoy the night.” The two-hour classes are typically on Friday or Saturday night; however, you can call and set up a private party for any night of the week. You can choose a 16X20 (or request a size) painting from Inspiration Haven’s collection or, if you give AmberLee a two-week notice, you can send her a picture of the art work would like to use instead. Everything you need to create your masterpiece is provided by the studio. If you require ‘snackage’ while painting (or hosting a birthday party or event) AmberLee says, “bring the food” just let her know first and she’ll make sure there’s a table for your victuals. Her goal is to create an inviting, fun space where everyone can be inspired. When asked what artist(s) inspire her she shares, “One of my favorite artists has always been Vincent Van Gogh. I love most post-impressionism art but his has always been a favorite of mine. I love how he creates movement in his artwork and the vibrant colors he uses. I’m also inspired by my husband’s grandma and aunt. They are incredible artists and I have always hoped to paint as well as they do.”

    When you visit Inspiration Haven’s website you will be greeted with these words: Inspiring Creativity & Imagination. If you scroll down just a bit more you’ll find this quote from Vincent Van Gough: “If you hear a voice within you say ‘you cannot paint,’ then by all means paint, and that voice will be silenced.” And that is just what AmberLee is doing; inspiring all to ‘silence’ the voice that says you can’t, to use their imagination, and to create!


    Santa’s Workshop
    Saturday, December 3rd. Sign up for painting and other Christmas crafts.

    Art Student Gallery
    Monday – Tuesday December 12th & 13th 5:00-8:00 pm


    2 S Main Street Heber City, UT
    435-271-3549

    inspirationhavenart.com

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