My Availability
My Availability
My general hours:
Sun-Fri 10 AM to 7 PM
(Friday 10 AM - 4:00 PM during winter to observe the Sabboth on time)
Saturday Open after Sundown, by appointment (we observe the Sabbath) usually around 5 PM in winter and 8 PM in Summer.
Meaning, I'll be available longer on Sundays during the winter and shorter on Fridays, and
longer on Fridays during the summer and shorter on Saturday.
We do not observe any traditional holidays so we're open on Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Years, Valentines Days, "Birthdays", Spring Break, Columbus Day, Martin Luther King Day, Labor Day, Memorial Day, Veteran's Day, Black Friday, New Years Eve, Christmas Eve, etc. and any other holidays that come standard as time off each year. So feel free to call me during any of those times and I'll be happy to help during those times.
However, we celebrate the following biblical feasts and I will be unavailable during these times. Which I will have posted as soon as possible. I know that we have Passover April 1-2, and another feast from the 3-10 of April and I believe one on the 11th. So April is going to be a challenging month for us but I'll get you all the dates as soon as I can.
Thank you for your patience and understanding.
-Kaye W.
I said I'd get the list, here it is...
In 2026, the biblical feast cycle begins with Passover on April 2nd. These "appointed times" (moedim) from Leviticus 23 are divided into spring and fall festivals, each carrying historical and agricultural significance.
Spring Feasts
The first three feasts occur in rapid succession during the month of Nisan, often referred to as the "Passover season".
Passover (Pesach): Commemorates the Israelite's' deliverance from Egypt. In 2026, it is observed from sunset on April 1 to sunset on April 2. If you've read you're bible you know this was the last plague before Pharaoh let the Israelite out of bondage (well sort of - he went chasing after them through the red sea Moses has parted by the holy power of Yah but was swallowed up, them and their chariots behind the Israelite. This last plague was to kill the first born of any house that didn't have blood painted on the door way, and there's a lot more to that story. When Pharaoh awoke to his first born son dead, his heart was finally softened by Yah to let the Israelite's' leave.
Feast of Unleavened Bread (Chag Ha-matzot): A seven-day festival where leaven is removed from homes to symbolize purity and the haste of the Exodus. It begins at sunset on April 2 and concludes on April 9. So the leaven isn't literally removed - it's the atonement for sin, the leaven/yeast is the sin. This is a time to eat unleaven bread and search your heart for anything that offends Yahuah, so that you can get THAT SIN out of your house. I don't know about you but groceries are expensive so we don't go just throwing all our food out - but we check the back of EVERYTHING before we eat it with our unleavened bread. For example Baking soda and baking poweder, nope. Sodium and aluminum bicarbonate, nope. Leaven, obvious nope. Yeast, nope.
Feast of First fruits (Yom HaBikkurim): Celebrates the beginning of the barley harvest. It occurs on the Sunday following the first Sabbath after Passover, which in 2026 is April 5.
Pentecost (Shavuot): Also known as the Feast of Weeks, it occurs 50 days after First fruits. It marks the wheat harvest and the giving of the Torah at Sinai. In 2026, it is observed from sunset on May 23 to sunset on May 24.
Fall Feasts
After a long summer interval, the final three feasts take place in the seventh month (Tishri).
Feast of Trumpets (Yom Teruah): A day of rest announced by trumpet blasts, marking the start of the civil New Year (Rosh Hashanah). In 2026, it begins at sunset on September 11.
Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur): The most solemn day of the year, characterized by fasting and repentance. In 2026, it is observed from sunset on September 20 to sunset on September 21. You'll never be as hungry as you've ever been when you're fasting. I don't know why that is. Suddenly, you're dying without food when most days life gets in the way and you forget to eat.
Feast of Tabernacles (Sukkot): A seven-day celebration of the fall harvest where participants live in temporary shelters (booths). In 2026, it runs from sunset on September 25 to sunset on October 2, followed by the "Eighth Day" (Shemini Atzeret) on October 3. 2025 was our first year doing the feasts and we started at the end and put the pagan traditions of men aside to truly follow our Elohim and we made a tent in our living room with foam mattress pads and sleeping bags and while we didn't sleep great, it was great fun. I hope to be able to do this with a group of people moving forward with a tent. We're definitely learning and it seems like everyone celebrated Passover on a different day this year which is confusing for us being so new into this walk because we are looking at the barley to avev through pictures, taking into account the moon phases, etc. Because Passover starts the timing off all of the other feasts. So it's kind of important.