NEWS A8 • HERMISTONHERALD.COM Community garden gets ready for planting season By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR The Lovin’ Spade- fuls Community Garden in Hermiston was abuzz with more than just the insects on Saturday, April 17, as volun- teers had a work party to get the garden in shape. On-site registration for plots at the garden, avail- able on a first-come-first- served basis for $10 for the season, will be Friday, April 30, from 4-7 p.m. and Saturday, May 1, from 9 a.m. to noon. The garden is located on the Elm Street side of the Good Shepherd Health Care System cam- pus. Plots still available after the on-site registra- tion days will be available for signup at the Umatilla Morrow Head Start/WIC offices. As the garden celebrates its 10-year anniversary this summer, it boasts new ame- nities, including 10 raised plots. Garden director Chelle Hankinson said the raised beds, lifted up a few feet off the ground by wooden boxes, are geared toward elderly gardeners and those with disabilities that make it difficult for them to kneel in the dirt. “We’re helping every demographic we can,” she said. On April 17, volunteers were using wood stain to help protect the newly con- structed raised beds, while others were putting together the irrigation systems for them. Other volunteers had Jade McDowell/Hermiston Herald Uppa Shakya, left, and her husband Suva Shakya paint wood stain on the new raised beds at Lovin’ Spadefuls Community Garden in Hermiston on Saturday, April 17, 2021. already worked to lay out the painted bricks that mark off each plot, and painted buckets with colorful inspi- rational messages. Husband and wife Suva and Uppa Shakya were working together to spread wood stain over one of the raised beds. “We’ve been with the garden since the beginning,” Suva said. “Our daughter running around over there was in her belly when we started.” Uppa said they enjoy bringing their children to the garden each summer to teach them how to grow their own food. The family also enjoys the fresh pro- duce they receive from it all summer, including toma- toes, beans, okra, garlic, onions and melons. As the garden prepares to open for the season, Hankin- son said the community continues to be incredibly generous. The new raised beds were paid for by a $4,800 grant from the Good Shepherd Community Health Foun- dation plus other private donations, including lumber from Home Depot and irri- gation parts from Elmer’s Irrigation. Hankinson said they plan to create a small oasis of grass, flowers and a bench in the center of the garden this year for people to rest from weeding or planting. Over the years the gar- den has also added a secu- rity camera system, a shed with tools for garden mem- bers to use, an improved irri- gation system, a greenhouse, new signs and other ameni- ties. The Master Garden- ers program has a plot with culinary herbs that this year will include additional signs about how to grow and use the herbs. “I just keep reaching for the stars, and they just keep falling into my hands,” Hankinson said. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 2021 Umatilla Museum preparing to reopen By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR After more than a year of closure, the Umatilla Museum is preparing to reopen. Unless Umatilla County gets shut down with addi- tional COVID-19 restric- tions, board member Judy Simmons said, the museum plans to hold a grand reopening on Satur- day, May 8. The museum closed during the initial COVID-19 shutdowns in spring 2020 and hasn’t been open to the public since that time. Simmons said volun- teers for the museum will hold a cleaning party on Saturday, April 24, to dust shelves and do other things needed to prepare. The museum used to have a paid employee, but no longer does. Simmons said the Umatilla Histor- ical Society, which runs the museum, is in need of volunteers who can work shifts during the museum’s hours, Thursday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. “Having an employee here really helped with getting volunteers,” she said. “Now we’re going to solely rely on volunteers.” The museum features a variety of displays, includ- ing sections on the Native American tribes that first settled the area, the McNary Dam, the railroad, pioneer household items and antique farm equip- ment. The building was once the Umatilla city hall Jade McDowell/Hermiston Herald Pictures and maps related to construction of the McNary Dam line the walls of the Umatilla Museum. and jail, and Simmons said the most popular room is the old jail cells. “People like that because they step inside and shut the door and get a picture of themselves in jail,” she said. Staff, students and alumni of Umatilla School District are working on a new room, featuring items from the school district’s past and a display about the district’s robotics teams. The historical society also filmed interviews with some of Umatilla’s oldest residents, which Simmons said they plan to show on a television after the videos are done being edited. The Umatilla Museum, 911 Sixth St., has a wheel- chair-accessible side entrance for those who aren’t able to make it up the step to the main entrance. People interested in volun- teering for the museum or donating Umatilla-specific artifacts can contact Sim- mons at 541-571-8780 or j205simmons@gmail.com.