Fair warning — April in Selah is packed. We've got a lot to share this month, and your email app might try to hide some of it (rude). If you see a "View entire message" link at the bottom, give it a click. It's all good stuff — we promise.
The 4th Annual Selah Easter Celebration is finally here — and if you've been before, you already know there's nothing quite like it. If this is your first one, you're in for something special.
Saturday, April 4th from 1 to 4 in the afternoon, Selah turns into the kind of place kids dream about. Hidden eggs tucked around every corner. Live music floating through the air. The Easter Bunny making appearances for photos. And families everywhere, soaking in an afternoon that just feels right.
Hunts kick off at 1:30 with our littlest explorers, then roll through the age groups all the way up to the big kids at 2:30. You'll find the action everywhere — around Pryor's Playground, behind The Reserve, across the lawns your kids already know and love.
No tickets. No signup. Just show up with a basket and a smile.
Bunny ears? Highly encouraged.
We'll see you out there tomorrow. This is what Selah was made for.
April has a way of making everything feel possible.
The shops at Selah are full of it right now. Vintage Vine just opened its doors — an upscale thrift concept unlike anything else here, stocked with curated pieces that feel discovered, not bought. Along the Lilacs is giving every room a reason to start over with spring arrivals that are equal parts fresh and timeless. Buttermilk has the spring looks for him and her, and Grey Scott's has Spring handled for the little ones.
When the shopping is done, make a night of it. Pryor's Pizza Kitchen, then a round at VR Odyssey — because the best family evenings don't follow a script.
April at Selah is the kind of thing you'll want to stay for. So stay. Which reminds me…
Not everyone who falls in love with April at Selah is ready to watch it end from their own driveway.
That's the thing about this time of year here. The evenings are warm enough to sit outside with a glass of something good. The shops are full of things worth finding. The community feels alive in a way that makes you want to slow down and actually be in it — not just pass through it.
Stay at Selah was made for exactly that feeling. A cottage tucked in the woods where Easter morning belongs to you — slow, quiet, and lit up by the kind of spring light that doesn't exist anywhere else. A sleek apartment in the Entry District when you want to step out the front door and be right in the middle of everything Selah has going on. An estate in The Vineyards for the moments that deserve a setting as grand as the occasion.
Short stays. Long weekends. A whole season if you need it. Whatever April is asking of you, there's a place here that fits.
Spring has a way of making people want to start something.
Maybe it's the longer days. Maybe it's the season turning over and taking you with it. Whatever it is, The Commons at The Entry District is where that energy has a home.
This stretch of Selah Way — just before the Entry District neighborhood — has quietly become one of the most lived-in parts of the village. Not because it was planned that way, though it was. But because the right combination of things in the right place tends to become part of people's lives before they even realize it's happened. That's what The Commons is. Not a destination. A routine.
The Forge Premier Training is where it starts. Elite coaching, serious equipment, and a culture that meets you where you are and pushes you further than you expected. Founding memberships are still available — and if there's ever a season to commit, it's this one.
Sweat at Selah brings heated Pilates, sculpt, and HIIT to the village with instructors who actually earn the word elite. You leave better than you arrived, every time. Spin is on the way — the waitlist is open and unlimited memberships start at $99 a month.
And LFTD Nutrition is the finish line worth crossing. Shakes, energy teas, and the kind of fuel that makes everything else feel worth it.
Selah was always designed so that the things that matter most would never be far from your door. Spring is a good time to test that theory.
April has a way of making people ask the question they've been putting off.
Not just what if — but why not now.
If you've spent any time at Selah this spring, you already know what makes it different. The way the community actually functions the way a community is supposed to. The way people here know their neighbors. The way the streets feel designed for life, not just traffic. That feeling isn't an accident — it's the result of building something with intention from the ground up, and protecting it the same way.
Owning here means buying into that. Not just a home, but a standard. A neighborhood worth showing up for today and worth handing down someday.
There are move-in ready homes available now — built with the craftsmanship and character Selah is known for, already inside the community you keep coming back to. And if you have something more specific in mind, there are lots waiting in The Vineyards and beyond for those ready to build the home they've always pictured in a place that already feels like home.
Spring is when things take root. This one's worth planting.
Volume I started the conversation. Volume II gets into the wiring.
If you've ever wondered why Selah feels different the moment you step out of your car — why the streets pull you forward instead of pushing you back inside — the answer lives in something most neighborhoods never get right: walkability.
Not as a buzzword. Not as a checkbox. As a belief that people deserve neighborhoods built to be moved through, not just stored in. That daily life shouldn't require a car for everything. That the space between your front door and your favorite spot in the village should feel like part of the experience, not an obstacle to it.
Volume II of The Village Voice — Walkability: The Shortcut to a Better Life — unpacks why this one design principle changes everything. How it shapes connection, independence, well-being, and the quiet sense that you actually belong to the place you live in.
It's a good read. And if you've spent any time walking Selah Way, it'll explain a few things you've already felt.