Skillshare 2026 – Because No One Survives Alone

Imagine this…

It’s a regular morning in the Illinois Valley. Coffee’s brewing. The mountains are still holding onto that early mist. Everything feels… normal.

Until it doesn’t.

The power flickers.
Your phone loses signal.
The grocery store shelves empty faster than anyone expected.

No alarms. No announcements. Just a quiet realization spreading from neighbor to neighbor:

Something’s off.

And suddenly, the question isn’t “What’s happening?”
It’s…

👉 “What do I actually know how to do?”


🔥 The Shift

In moments like this, something interesting happens.

The world doesn’t end in chaos.
It reorganizes.

  • The person who knows how to grow food becomes essential.
  • The one who can fix a generator becomes invaluable.
  • The one who can cook from scratch, preserve food, build, mend, organize, teach…
    becomes the center of a very important circle.

And just as quickly, another truth becomes clear:

No one survives alone.


🌿 Enter: Skillshare 2026

This is where Spiral Living Center steps in—not with fear, but with something far more powerful:

Preparation. Community. Shared knowledge.

Skillshare 2026: Build Your Survival Skill Set isn’t about zombies (though let’s be honest… we’re borrowing the vibe 🧟‍♂️).

It’s about asking a better question:

👉 If things get weird… what role do you play?


🛠️ What This Event Really Is

Skillshare is a community-powered day of hands-on learning, where everyday people step forward and say:

✨ “Here’s what I know.”
✨ “Here’s what I can teach.”
✨ “Here’s how we help each other.”

You might learn:

  • How to grow and preserve your own food
  • Basic repair and tool skills
  • Herbal remedies and natural wellness
  • Cooking from scratch
  • Emergency preparedness
  • Creative problem-solving
  • And the kinds of skills that don’t show up in textbooks—but absolutely matter when life gets unpredictable

🧭 The Real Survival Strategy

Let’s be honest.

If the world ever does tilt sideways…
The people who thrive won’t be the ones who panic.

They’ll be the ones who:

  • Know something useful
  • Stay connected
  • And can look at a challenge and say,
    “Okay… we can figure this out.”

That’s what Skillshare is building.

Not fear.
Capability.

Not isolation.
Community.


🌌 Closing: Your Role in the Story

So here’s the real question:

If things got weird tomorrow…

👉 Would you know what to do?
👉 Would you know who to turn to?
👉 Would someone else be glad you were there?

Skillshare 2026 is your chance to step into that answer.

Come learn.
Come teach.
Come connect.

Because when things get weird…

Useful people matter.
And no one survives alone.


📣 Call to Action

👉 Interested in teaching or participating?
Fill out the Skillshare Interest Form:
https://tinyurl.com/2026-skillshare-interest-form

👉 Stay tuned—class offerings will be announced on the Spiral Living Center website as they’re confirmed.

Save the Date: Spiral Living Center’s 20th Annual Skillshare

Spiral Living Center’s annual Skillshare is returning on Saturday, June 13, 2026 and this year’s event will be especially meaningful as we also celebrate 20 years of Spiral Living Center.

Skillshare is a free, in-person community event rooted in a simple idea: everyone has something to share.

Over the years, Skillshare has brought people together to exchange practical skills, sustainable living knowledge, creative ideas, and hands-on learning in a welcoming and community-based setting. From gardening and food preservation to crafts, wellness, repair skills, homesteading knowledge, and creative expression, Skillshare is a space where neighbors can learn from neighbors.

This year, we’re beginning the planning process and inviting the community to help shape the day.

We’re currently looking for:

  • People who would like to teach or demonstrate a skill
  • Community booths / tables
  • Volunteers
  • Community members who want to attend and stay informed

Whether you have a practical skill to share, an idea for a mini session, or simply want to be part of the day, we’d love to hear from you.

Why Skillshare matters

Skillshare reflects so much of what Spiral Living Center is about: community resilience, local knowledge, accessibility, creativity, and connection.

In a time when so much information is filtered through screens, Skillshare offers something more human — a chance to gather in person, learn by doing, ask questions, and pass knowledge from one person to another.

It’s not about being an expert.
It’s about showing up with what you know and making space for others to do the same.

Interested in getting involved?

👉 Fill out the Skillshare Interest Form here:
https://tinyurl.com/2026-skillshare-interest-form

We hope you’ll save the date and be part of this special year.

Saturday, June 13, 2026
Free • All are welcome • Illinois Valley

Call for Flash Skillshare Leaders

Share What You Know in 15 Minutes or Less

What if learning felt like a spark instead of a seminar?

Spiral Living Center is inviting community members to lead Flash Skillshares at our upcoming event — short, engaging, hands-on mini sessions that plant seeds of knowledge in just 10–15 minutes.

No long lectures.
No PowerPoints required.
Just real people sharing real skills.

We believe our valley is full of quiet brilliance — gardeners, herbalists, homesteaders, artists, repair wizards, storytellers, seed savers, soil builders, bread bakers, fermenters, fixers, and lifelong learners.

Now we’re making space for you to teach.


🌱 What Is a Flash Skillshare?

A Flash Skillshare is:

  • 10–15 minutes long
  • Simple and practical
  • Interactive or demonstration-based
  • Beginner-friendly
  • Rooted in community resilience, creativity, or sustainability

Think of it as a knowledge spark. Small, bright, and contagious.


🌻 What Could You Share?

Here are just a few ideas to get your gears turning:

  • Composting with red wigglers
  • Starting seeds successfully
  • Herbal salve basics
  • Backyard mushroom cultivation
  • Fermentation 101
  • Tool sharpening
  • Creative mending
  • Native plant identification
  • Soil health basics
  • DIY pollinator habitats
  • Quick garden planning tips

If you’ve ever said,
“Oh, it’s simple, I could show someone how to do that…”

Yes. That’s exactly what we’re looking for.


🌾 Why Participate?

  • Contribute to community knowledge
  • Connect with like-minded neighbors
  • Promote your project, farm, or small business
  • Build confidence as a teacher
  • Help make this year’s event unforgettable

You don’t need to be an “expert.” You just need to be willing.


🌞 What We Provide

Spiral Living will:

  • Schedule your session
  • Promote your topic on social media
  • Provide a designated teaching space
  • Include you in the event program

You bring your passion, any small demo materials, and your willingness to share.

🌿 Ready to Lead a Flash Skillshare?

We’d love to hear from you.

If you feel that little nudge — that “I could teach this” whisper — follow it.

👉 Sign up here to lead a Flash Skillshare:
https://forms.gle/izX9bkX8JjubAS3U9

Spots are limited, and we’ll be curating a balanced lineup of topics, so we encourage early submissions.

Let’s build a culture where knowledge moves hand-to-hand, like seeds passed across a table.

⚡ Small sparks. Big community.

🌱 5 Reasons You Should Attend a Seed Exchange in the Illinois Valley

There’s something timeless about a seed exchange.

Small envelopes. Handwritten labels. Stories tucked inside paper folds.

On March 21, Spiral Living Center will host the 20th Annual Seed Swap at Jubilee Park, continuing a tradition that has connected Illinois Valley gardeners for two decades.

If you’ve never attended a seed exchange before, here are five reasons to come see what it’s all about.


1. Preserve Heirloom & Local Varieties

Seed exchanges help protect plant varieties that may not be available in big-box stores.

Many of the seeds shared at local swaps have been grown in the Illinois Valley for years — sometimes decades. These plants are adapted to our climate, our soil, and our seasons.

When you attend a seed swap, you’re participating in local food resilience.


2. Save Money While Growing More

Gardening can get expensive.

A seed exchange allows you to trade what you have for something new — often at no cost. Whether you’re starting your first raised bed or expanding your garden this year, seed swaps make growing more accessible.


3. Learn From Experienced Gardeners

Seed exchanges are living classrooms.

You’ll meet orchardists who can explain scion wood and grafting, experienced growers who understand what thrives in Southern Oregon, and neighbors who have experimented season after season.

It’s knowledge passed hand to hand.


4. Connect With the Illinois Valley Gardening Community

The Annual Seed Swap at Jubilee Park isn’t just about seeds. It’s about community.

Gardeners of all experience levels gather to share ideas, troubleshoot challenges, and celebrate the growing season ahead.

Whether you’re a homesteader, backyard gardener, or curious beginner, there’s room for you.


5. Be Part of a 20-Year Tradition

For twenty years, this event has brought the Illinois Valley together each spring.

That kind of consistency matters.

When you attend, you’re not just picking up seeds — you’re participating in a local tradition that strengthens community ties year after year.


🌿 Join Us

20th Annual Seed Swap
📍 Jubilee Park – Illinois Valley, Oregon
📅 March 21
⏰ 11 AM – 3 PM

Bring seeds, scion wood, plant starts — or simply bring your curiosity.

🌱 Planning to attend? Let us know and invite a friend!
Visit and share our official Facebook event page for updates, vendor highlights, and reminders:

👉 https://www.facebook.com/events/1456494229151248

Mark yourself as “Going” or “Interested” to stay in the loop — and help us spread the word as we celebrate 20 years of growing together.

🌱 Volunteer at Spiral Living’s 20th Annual Seed Swap

For twenty years, the Annual Seed Swap has brought the Illinois Valley together to share seeds, scion wood, plant starts, and stories.

On March 21 from 12 PM – 3 PM at Jubilee Park, we’ll celebrate the 20th Annual Seed Swap, and we’re inviting volunteers to help make it happen.

This event runs on generosity — not just in the seeds we exchange, but in the hands that help set up tables, welcome guests, and guide the flow of the day.

If you love gardens, community events, or simply being part of something meaningful, we would love to have you join us.


🌿 Why Volunteer at the Illinois Valley Seed Swap?

Volunteering at the Seed Swap is more than event support. It’s a chance to:

• Connect with local gardeners and growers
• Support food resilience in Southern Oregon
• Be part of a 20-year Illinois Valley tradition
• Help create a welcoming, inclusive community event

Whether you’re a master gardener or someone who just enjoys being around good people and growing things, there’s a place for you.


🌱 Volunteer Roles – 20th Annual Seed Swap

We’re building a team of friendly, grounded, community-minded helpers to make this year’s Seed Swap our best yet. Shifts are available in 1.5-hour increments.

Below are the current open roles:

🌿 Garden Gate – Greeter

Welcome guests as they arrive, answer basic questions, and help direct traffic at the check-in table. This role sets the tone for the entire event — warm, organized, and welcoming.

🌾 Seed Steward

Support the Seed Exchange tables by helping organize packets and guiding participants through the swapping process. If you enjoy order and helping others navigate systems, this is a great fit.

🌳 Scion Steward

Assist at the Scion Exchange area. Help ensure fruit tree cuttings are clearly labeled and organized for smooth distribution.

🌀 Spiral Guide (Stamp Quest Support)

Help participants engage in the Spiral Stamp Quest by guiding them through the activity and collecting completed cards. Great for someone who enjoys interacting with families and encouraging participation.

🌻 Harvest Helper (Vendor Support / Float)

Check in with vendors throughout the event, help problem-solve, and assist where needed. This is a flexible role for someone who likes being responsive and adaptable.

🎱 Bingo Host

Help facilitate Community Bingo. You’ll assist with calling numbers, organizing participants, and keeping the energy light and fun.

📸 Event Photographer

Capture candid moments, activity highlights, and wide shots throughout the event. These photos help us document and promote future Seed Swaps.


🌿 Event Details

20th Annual Seed Swap
📍 Jubilee Park – Illinois Valley, Oregon
📅 March 21
⏰ 12 PM – 3 PM

Volunteer shifts will be scheduled before, during, and after the main event window.


🌿 Stay Connected

Want to see updates, vendor announcements, and event reminders?

Follow and share the official Facebook event page for the 20th Annual Seed Swap:

👉 View the Facebook Event Here:
https://www.facebook.com/events/1456494229151248

We’ll be posting updates about participating garden groups, volunteer highlights, and what to bring as the event approaches.

Inviting friends and sharing the event helps our community continue growing for another 20 years.


🌱 Ready to Join Us?

If you’d like to volunteer at this year’s Seed Swap, please complete the registration form below.

 

We’ll follow up with details about roles, timing, and next steps.

Together, we’re not just exchanging seeds.
We’re cultivating connection.


Summer 2024 Earth Scouts Workshop Series

Summer 2024 Earth Scouts! Skillshare Workshop Series

August 5 @ 8:30 am - August 21 @ 4:00 pm

This summer, the Spiral Living Center invites you to join our three-week series of Earth Scouts! classes from August 5-21! Classes will be held Mondays-Wednesdays from 8:30AM-4PM at the From Farm in Takilma and will feature over 60 hours of sustainable-living skills and topics taught by local teachers. Earth Scouts! is a program of the Spiral Living Center and started in memory of Scout, a talented musician, SLC board member, avid gardener, generous volunteer, caring friend, and activist for social and environmental justice. The program is designed around 4 core principles: self-care, skills building, community service and earth care.

This summer 2024 series is open to all TEENS & ADULTS, ages 13 and up. Attend single classes or the entire series—class sizes are limited, so pre-registration is encouraged at www.spiralliving.org. SLC Member Discounts and Work-Trade options are available, please inquire with deb@spiralliving.org for work-trade scholarships.

We are inviting Kalmiopsis Community Arts (KCA) High School students to attend this series free of charge aside from a $20 registration fee, if possible. Parents will need to fill out a registration form LINKED HERE and waiver LINKED HERE. KCA students can work with Kaci to receive school credit! Note: transportation/meals are not provided.

Our entire class schedule is linked below! Please click each class title below to expand it’s full description and teacher bios. Offline registration is available: to pay with cash/check, please specify at class “check-out” and bring/send registration fee to Spiral Living Center Earth Scouts Program, 9044 Takilma Road, Cave Junction, OR 97523.

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EarthScoutsGraphic

Empowering IV teens and adults through skill building and outdoor educational experiences!

A Spanish Class for all ages–learn basic greetings and phrases with an emphasis on farm/community vocabulary. Notebook and pen included! Stretch and BREATHE! Padma will share simple breathing techniques to connect you to your DAN TIEN ( FOUNTAIN OF LIFE THAT LIVES IN YOU!). Also simple stretches to open your roots to the Earth and activate your Chi. Padma Hawkins has lived all over the world and taken care of children and community all her life. She believes in our land, permaculture, sharing of languages and ideas, in peace. Padma has studied with a TaiChi teacher for the past 7 years. She has also taught Spanish & English since she was 16 (on and off).

In this Sound Listening workshop, Thollem facilitates an enjoyable process of opening up and tuning into the nuances of the sounds around us, how we receive them and how we are participating with them. It is open to everyone regardless of musical experience, knowledge, or level of confidence. This is a rejuvenating experience that will inspire our imaginations and the possibility for aural curiosity every moment of our lives. The workshop incorporates objects and materials in the area, the acoustical properties of the space(s), our voices, body percussion and everything we discover throughout the process. Thollem has been teaching private music lessons since they were a teenager. Now Thollem primarily teaches workshops while on their perpetual tour!

Seeing Through Lenses is a workshop that uses tools many of us have: our ability to observe; our curiosity; our brain’s translation of visual moments around us; and a video camera in the form of a smartphone. Facilitated by video artist ACVilla (aka Angela), the time will be spent seeing our surroundings anew, video-recording moments, and sharing the resulting ‘film shorts’ with each other. We will be in the same area at the same time, yet by sharing, each participant will re-discover the space through the eyes of another. Seeing through our lenses those everyday places we no longer notice, but that make up a significant part of our lives, is a practice that this class aims to deepen.

ACVilla (b. 1968, Chicana) is a visual artist of moving stills. She focuses her camera on the subtleties of interpersonal dynamics and the power that context plays in constantly redefining what people believe they already know. Angela highlights those aspects of Life with an analog sensibility using digital equipment that fit into her nomadic lifestyle. She is known for her ongoing series of murals-with-a-message and contextualizations, a practice of projecting the outside world in. Coupled with her background as a teacher, Angela uses her simple tool as Dorothea Lange aptly described, “an instrument that teaches people how to see without a camera.” The class is mobile, on foot: around the Frog Farm and other places. This class is based on moving through spaces, or staying in one place. It is based on curiosity. Students bring: Comfortable clothing and shoes. Please bring: a mobile phone that has a video setting (or a simple camera with a video setting is ok.)

Come play in the mud with us! This three-part series will provide an overview of natural building techniques with a focus on cob. Learn how to test soil, mix cob, build and repair walls and how to add sculptural elements. We will be mixing with our feet and applying with our hands- dress to get muddy! Attend the whole series or just singular classes for building or plastering only. Jenn Fogler first began studying natural building in 2008, with a desire to live a more sustainable and less toxic lifestyle.  She attended workshops learning to build with cob, straw bales, light clay straw, and adobe. Later that year she taught her first cob building workshop and lead volunteers to complete an outdoor kitchen and cob oven. In 2020 she moved to New Mexico, was reconnected with her passion for natural building, and began an internship as an adobe mason. She then was hired by the National park service and served as a mason and crew lead of the historical preservation team at Pecos National Historical Park for two years. During that time she attended school and received her certificate for adobe construction from Santa Fe Community College. She has recently returned to Southern Oregon and is excited to continue her path as a natural builder, working on various projects and sharing her passion and knowledge with others.

Introduction to Natural Building with Cob: Class 1 Tuesday August 6 from 8:30-4 and Wednesday August 7 from 8:30am-12:00pm. Come play in the mud with us! This workshop will provide an overview of natural building techniques with a focus on cob. Learn how to test soil, mix cob, build and repair walls and how to add sculptural elements. We will be mixing with our feet and applying with our hands- dress to get muddy!

Class 2: Monday August 12 from 8:30am-12:30pm-Introduction to Earthen Plaster. Earthen plasters offer an elegant, environmental, allergen-free,  low-cost,  DIY solution for exterior and interior wall finishes.  Due to its exceptional breathability, earthen plasters are especially suited to strawbale construction and other natural building forms. Gain hands-on experience mixing and applying a base coat of earthen plaster to straw bale and cob walls.

Class 3: Tuesday August 20 from 8:30am-4pm Introduction to Earthen Plasters Continued: Earthen plasters offer an elegant, environmental, allergen-free,  low-cost,  DIY solution for exterior and interior wall finishes.  Due to its exceptional breathability, earthen plasters are especially suited to strawbale construction and other natural building forms. Gain hands-on experience mixing and applying earthen plaster to straw bale and cob walls. We will also discuss in this workshop different layers of earthen plaster and how to apply earthen plaster to drywall, lathe and plywood.

During this 3 part weekly class on Wednesdays, you’ll learn plant ID, terminology, identification, herbarium, and you’ll have hands-on time using herbs for making herbal oils for salves & creams, drying for tea, and herbal poultices. CLICK HERE to view the class syllabus. Debbie Lukas works as a Clinical Herbalist and Herbal Pharmacist with 25 years of experience. She founded the family business Siskiyou Mountain Herbs, and propagates and grows many medicinal plants on the Frog Farm in Takilma, Oregon. Debbie teaches classes emphasizing respect for the land, ethical harvesting techniques and propagation of rare medicinal plants. She has been involved in various nonprofits over the years as staff, board member, and volunteer. She dreams of uniting diverse people in the Illinois Valley in the quest for sustainable living. She raises chickens, vegetables, herbs and hope! In 2006, she founded the Spiral Living Center with her husband Steve Orr to provide education and support to those living in the Illinois Valley. She currently serves as Executive Director.

This 90 minute class on August 13 from 10:30AM-Noon offers a visual exploration of the plants around us. Christine invites you to wonder and follow your curiosity as we look and learn together. We’ll use the text “Botany in a Day” for field and desk exploration of plant science in the Frog Farm garden. Christine holds a BA in Botany and Environmental Studies from Pitzer College, Claremont and Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden. She has taught botany in several places, including YoSan University of Traditional Chinese Medicine in LA, and at the Siskiyou Herb Fest in 2012. She incorporated botanical studies in the watershed context for river/wetland re-naturalization teaching at PSU in Oregon and in UK Middlesex University Enfield.

On August 14th, you’ll learn how to dispatch, skin, dress and butcher a goat! Afterwards, on August 19 you’ll learn how to flesh the hide, mix a solution of alum, washing soda, and salt. As a group, we will soak the hide, then rinse and stretch. Bring a 5 gallon bucket and lid! Shawn is an active parent, grandparent, and homesteading jack of all trades. He has been butchering and tanning for over a decade.

Join Maki for this weekly crafting time from 1-4pm on Mondays August 5, 12, and 19. The fiber art series will include Sashiko creative mending,  patching clothes, and simple weaving with a variety of natural fibers. Week 1: Learn to weave patches on a small loom. Week 2: Learn Sashiko, traditional Japanese embroidery.  What is this decorative and practical art? Practice the stitch, learn to design, take home your project to work on. Week 3: Discuss & practice patching- fabrics and location of holes, hand or machine, use your woven patch! All series materials are included along with 9 hours of personalized instruction. Maki Hotta was born in Japan, moved to the East Coast as a young adult, and found her home in the Illinois Valley in 2014. She enjoys many fiber arts including sewing, felting, carding, and weaving. She is interested in connecting with people to form a “fiber shed”, including local processing for locally raised fibers. Maki has a background in gardening, farming, hairdressing, and community service. She provides care for elders, and is studying to become a death doula.

Join Rae Elise, (YT200) certified yoga teacher, for short 30 minute breathing sessions peppered throughout this 3-week series. Rae also teaches a separate weekly yoga class on Thursday evenings at the Frog Farm from 6-6:50PM. Yoga classes are always drop-in and donation based. Bring your own yoga mat or blanket, if possible.

On Mondays August 5 & 19 from 12:30-3PM, help assist Eliot with sorting and cataloging a large variety of books for our Spiral Living Center library! We need help organizing books in our online database so that they may be checked out by community members soon. More information about the library can be found here!

(Optional) Put in a few hours and help volunteer at our monthly pop-up food pantry at the IV Grange #370 on Wednesday August 21–From 1-3pm we’ll organize food at Frog Farm, 2-4pm on site set up @ Grange, & 4-6pm volunteer on site at the Grange & clean-up pantry. This is a great way to give back to our community and cultivate a culture of mutual-aid. Attendees are also welcome to volunteer to assist with our Earth Scouts Can Drive on Saturday August 24 from 10am-2pm. We ask teens to sign up for a 2 hour shift at the Earth Scouts Cans for Kids on August 24. Bring returnables and pay it forward for the next workshops! 

We welcome and need donations to continue this program! This summer session featuring over 60 hours of instruction costs almost $5,000, raised through can drives, donations, class fees, and fundraisers. To make a tax-deductible donation to the Spiral Living Center, please CLICK HERE.

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Frog Farm

9044 Takilma Road
Cave Junction, OR 97523 United States