Secure the Sun: Napa’s new Musicians
STS kicked off BottleRock this year, opening the festival at the JAM Cellars stage, where the biggest headliners play their sets at the end of the day. STS already opened in various clubs and colleges around the Bay, including a sold-out show at Petaluma’s famous Mystic Theatre. Their single, “Day by Day,” is already circulating collegiate radio throughout the state.
While the band enjoys success at BottleRock, it’s clear the quartet is still in its early stages. When asked about what they request on their rider lists, guitarist Milligan scratched his head. “What the heck is a rider list? Wait, we can ask for stuff?”
Be sure to catch these up-and-coming musicians when you can; if they keep up the pace, they’re soon going to the national stage.
www.facebook.com/SecureTheSun
Rich Thomas: Mentor and Master of Wine
Awarded the Nick Frey Community Contribution award this year, he says, “I think this award is recognition for a lifetime’s worth of work. When I started teaching in the 1970s, there were only a few vineyards. Joe Rochioli had two grapes on his property; Robbie Young was just getting started. Today, everyone has vineyards, far as the eye can see in this county. I like to think I did my part to help that.”
At SRJC, Thomas’ viticulture classes were the cutting edge of winemaking tech in the area. “If I had to name the three biggest changes in the county, it would be these,” he says. “First: We developed the area’s first drip irrigation block; second: the first non-till farm; third: We came back from Australia and New Zealand in the 1980s to bring trellis farming to Sonoma County. You see all these things here today, but when I started, they weren’t even concepts.”
Since he retired from vineyard management and column writing (Thomas was a previous VineWise columnist for NorthBay biz) 15 years ago, Thomas spends the days enjoying time with his wife and spoiling his grandchildren (whenever he’s not fishing). “If I had to give advice to today’s aspiring viticulturists and farmers, it would be to get an education. The on-hand generation-to-generation learning method is obsolete: there’s too much to know these days about modern agriculture.
“You have to be willing to accept new things.”