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    SYV Stories

    Real conversations about community and purpose in the Santa Ynez Valley.
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    Episodes (19)

    Ep. 19: Bethania Miracle Workers - Feeding Our Neighbors in Need

    Ep. 19: Bethania Miracle Workers - Feeding Our Neighbors in Need

    Even before the Covid pandemic, Bethania and its members made it their mission to feed our community.  From brown bag lunches for seniors, to healthy vegetables for Bethania’s preschoolers, to the blessing box outside the Church, Bethania had already been filling the gaps in our community when it came to food insecurity.
    So it was fortunate that by the time the pandemic forced closures across the country, Bethania had already started the process to license its facilities for emergency food distribution.  When it became clear that quarantine and the corresponding job loss and school shutdowns pushed many who were already struggling to feed their families into dire straits, Linda Marzullo and Pastor Chris Brown sprang into action.  Within a week, they had been approved to receive food from the Food Bank of Santa Barbara, which distributes millions of pounds of USDA food annually.
    In this special “on location” episode, you’ll hear from several volunteers who work with Linda Marzullo, week after week, to feed hundreds of struggling families right here in our community.  You’ll also hear from a few of our friends and neighbors who brave the long line to receive food because times are especially tough this season.  And while the need for food has only increased in recent weeks, so has Bethania and Linda Marzullo’s resolve to meet that need head on. 
    In the last half of the episode, host Tamara Rowles of SYV Stories sits down with Linda Marzullo to discuss how Bethania feeds up to 1500 people each week with volunteers, community donations, hard work, and compassion. 
    Also mentioned in this episode: The Food Bank of Santa Barbara, Bob’s Well Bread, El Rancho Market, Atterdag Village, Los Olivos Rotary, Rotary Club of the Santa Ynez Valley, SYV Foundation, and Veggie Rescue.
    The following businesses have also contributed to Bethania in their food distribution efforts: Olsen's Danish Village Bakery, Solvang Restaurant, Gerda's Iron Art, Birkholm's Bakery, Bert Cohen Foundation, New Frontiers, Wildling Museum.  Thank you for your support!

    SYV Stories
    en-usNovember 28, 2020

    Ep. 18: Nakia Zavalla - Teacher of Chumash Language and Culture

    Ep. 18: Nakia Zavalla - Teacher of Chumash Language and Culture

    Nakia Zavalla can trace her Chumash heritage back to at least six generations.  She grew up on the Chumash reservation and learned about Chumash traditions from her grandmother and her parents.  

    As Cultural Director for the Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians, today Nakia teaches the Samala language and Chumash culture to both the tribe and the Santa Ynez Valley Community.

    In our conversation, we discuss her family’s history, her experiences growing up on the reservation, her mission and life’s work to preserve and teach the Samala language and Chumash culture, the challenges she’s faced and overcome along the way, and her vision for the future of her people.

    For more information, please visit: Chumash website.

    Also mentioned in this episode: Chumash Culture Day, Maria Solares, John Peabody Harrington Papers, Family School, Unity Rally for Inclusion.

    Solvang Spice Merchant is featured in Small Business Spotlight.  

    SYV Stories
    en-usNovember 17, 2020

    Ep. 17: Joan Hartmann - Compassion and Public Service

    Ep. 17: Joan Hartmann - Compassion and Public Service

    Joan Hartmann spent her first 10 years exploring the wonders of rural Wisconsin.  Her father passed away shortly after her family moved to California, leaving her mother, a pediatric nurse, to raise two children on her own.  Hartmann draws heavily on these early experiences, which gave her courage, determination, compassion, and grit.

    Her career took a windy path from environmental policy professor to public service.  While living in Buellton, she participated in a grass roots campaign to ensure voters had a say in the size and expansion of their community, an effort that inspired her to get involved in local politics.  Hartmann soon became a planning commissioner under Supervisor Doreen Farr, and with Farr’s endorsement, she took the baton as County Supervisor in 2016.

    Winning reelection early in the March primary, Hartmann is poised and ready to begin a challenging second term.  She holds regular office hours via Zoom to hear from community members.  Make an appointment to speak with Supervisor Hartmann by clicking on the following link: https://calendly.com/supervisorjoanhartmannvirtualofficehours.

    Also mentioned in this episode: Madi’s Treasure Box, John Ormond, and Jessy Verkler.  

    Oneder Child is featured in Small Business Spotlight. 

    SYV Stories
    en-usOctober 27, 2020

    Ep. 16: Brooks Firestone - Politician, Philanthropist, Family Man

    Ep. 16: Brooks Firestone - Politician, Philanthropist, Family Man

    In the early 70’s, Brooks Firestone left his family’s famous tire company to start the Valley’s first commercial winery.  In the last 50 years, with Kate, his wife of 62-years, the Firestones have raised 4 children, and now boast 14 grandchildren and 4 great-grandchildren.

    While he’s most proud of his family, Mr. Firestone has made his mark on our community as a philanthropist and politician.  He served 2 terms as a California Assemblyman and one term as a County Supervisor.  He and Kate were also honored in 2018 with the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Santa Ynez Valley Foundation for their long record of service.

    In our wide-ranging conversation, Mr. Firestone and I discuss his career in the wine industry and his achievements in politics.  We also discuss his three books, two about Valley Animals and a third about his recently discovered passion for choral singing.  I couldn’t resist mentioning his brief stint on his youngest son Andrew’s season of the Bachelor.  And there’s a few other classic stories thrown in, including one about President Ronald Reagan and his longtime vet, the beloved Doug Herthel.

    Mentioned in this episode: his three books: Valley Animals, More Valley Animals (to be published later this year), and Evensong; Firestone Winery, Firestone Walker Brewing Company, Messiah… Refreshed!, Doug Herthel, St. Marks Church, Alisal Guest Ranch, and Anya Linden.

    Sunrise Organic Farm is featured in Small Business Spotlight.  

    SYV Stories
    en-usOctober 16, 2020

    Ep. 15: Wes Hagen - Winemaker, Map Maker & Day Drinker

    Ep. 15: Wes Hagen - Winemaker, Map Maker & Day Drinker

    As the Consulting Winemaker and Brand Ambassador for Miller Family Wines, Wes Hagen talks about wine for a living.  And if I had a day to spend tasting and learning about wine, Wes would be the first person I’d choose to join me.  He’d wax eloquent about coaxing soil into the deliciousness that is wine and postulate that without wine there would be no democracy.  He is perhaps the most articulate and persuasive advocate for the exceptional wines that come out of the Santa Barbara County.

    A former teacher, Wes loves to share the history of the vineyards and founding winemakers and would be the first to point out the many local heroes in the Santa Barbara County wine industry.  He has solidified his own legacy by writing the petitions that created four of the seven American Viticulture Areas recognized by the federal government: Santa Rita Hills, Happy Canyon, Ballard Canyon, and the newly created Alisos Canyon AVA.  He is quite literally putting Santa Barbara County wines on the map, and in the process, creating publicity and veneration for the unique wines created in our beautiful community.   

    I first met Wes when my then-husband, Noah Rowles, hired him to write the petition of what would become the Alisos Canyon AVA.  Noah had just purchased a ranch in Los Alamos that we would call Dovecote, which was home to the 30-year-old historic Thompson Vineyard.  Five years later, the Alisos Canyon AVA makes its debut this week just as Noah is releasing the first wines he made as full-time winemaker at Dovecote.

    In our wide-ranging conversation, Wes and I reflect on the process of creating the AVA.  We also discuss how Wes became the winemaker and vineyard manager at Clos Pepe, how he shaped Santa Barbara county’s maps as its most prolific AVA petition writer, how the wine industry benefits our community and how it can co-exist with the cannabis industry, and why wines from this region stand up to any on the world’s stage.  His passion for wine is contagious and I have no doubt our conversation will leave you yearning for a glass of crisp pinot blanc on this hot summer day.  

    Dovecote Estate is featured in Small Business Spotlight.  Mention this podcast to receive 20% off your tasting fee.  Tasting is available by appointment only.

    Also mentioned in this episode:  Day Drinking with Wes Hagen YouTube show, Miller Family Wines, J. Wilkes Wines, The Wine Bible, Bien Nacido Vineyard, Richard Sanford, Clos Pepe, Adam Tolmac of Ojai Vineyard, Tom Wark’s Fermentation blog, Arthur George on The Myth of Wine, Will Castello’s Somm School


    SYV Stories
    en-usAugust 24, 2020

    Ep. 14: Kimberly Zimmerman - Yogi and Juicy Lifestyle Guru

    Ep. 14: Kimberly Zimmerman - Yogi and Juicy Lifestyle Guru

    I first met Kim when a friend recommended her yoga studio, The Juicy Life in Santa Ynez.  By my first downward facing dog, I was put off by the loud music as I had never done yoga this way, but by the end of that initial class I realized her playlist, which paired well with the intention she set at the beginning of class, really helped me tune out both the outside world and the inside noise in my brain and focus on my mat and my body’s movement.  I was hooked.

    Kim’s passion for health, wellness, and balance is addictive.  In our conversation, we discuss how she left her corporate job to pursue her passion, the ups and downs of owning a small business, how we as members of this community can begin our own wellness journeys, the benefits of yoga and juicing, and what her plans are to bring her “Juicy Lifestyle” to the community.

    Mentioned in this episode:  The Juicy Life Yoga Studio, The Juicy Life Juicery, Core Power Yoga.

    The Good Seed is featured in Small Business Spotlight.

    SYV Stories
    en-usJuly 14, 2020

    Ep. 13: Clau Orona - The Historic Solvang Trolley

    Ep. 13: Clau Orona - The Historic Solvang Trolley

    The Solvang Trolley is truly a family-run business. Since the traditional Danish style trolley hit the Solvang Streets in the 60’s, the trolley business has been passed down from family to family. Today its owned by the Orona family.  Sal Sr. drives the horse and trolley, Sal. Jr. gives tours, Lorena works the stables and the ice cream parlor where tickets are sold, and Claudia (Clau) also serves as tour guide and ice cream scooper.   

    Many in town may not know that Solvang Trolley gives free rides to locals (though donations are appreciated).  My children and I rode the Trolley for the first time this week. We picked up our tickets at the Solvang Trolley Ice Cream Parlor inside Hamlet Square, across the street from the Trolley stop at Copenhagen and 2nd Street.  We waited just a few minutes after the prior tour exited while the Orona family carefully cleaned all the surfaces with antibacterial spray.  Then we were off.  Our 30 minute ride let me see the town as a tourist would, and it was truly a special experience that made me so proud of our town.

    For the first part of the episode, you’ll join me and my children on the trolley.  In the second part, we’ll chat with Clau Orona about the trolley’s history, her family’s purchase of the business, and how they’ve adjusted their practices since Covid-19.  We also chat about the upcoming hearing at Solvang City Council on July 13th, where the Orona’s permit to operate their business is at stake as the Council considers other alternatives. 

    Also mentioned in this episode:  Bethania Lutheran, Father Bobbie Barbato, Elverhoj Museum, Hans Christian Andersen Museum, Valley Fresh Market, Solvang City CouncilBrooks Firestone makes a special cameo.

    Kira’s Slime Lab is featured in Small Business Spotlight.

    SYV Stories
    en-usJuly 01, 2020

    Ep. 12: Vashti Wilson - Veteran, Mother, Entrepreneur, Community Activist

    Ep. 12: Vashti Wilson - Veteran, Mother, Entrepreneur, Community Activist

    Note: This episode contains some profanity and an honest discussion about racism, including details about racially motivated incidents, that may not be suitable for a younger audience.

    My guest this week moved to the Valley less than a year ago, but she’s already made a significant impact.  In the last few weeks since George Floyd’s tragic death reinvigorated the Black Lives Matter movement to end systemic racism, as well as the call for white folks to become allies and confront white privilege and fragility, I’ve heard her name in several conversations I’ve had among friends about actions we as a small community can take to promote justice and equality.  Vashti Wilson may not have sought out this new role she’s been thrust into, but many have experienced her inspiring leadership. 

    Her speech captivated attendees at the Solvang vigil for George Floyd.  She organized a soul affirming gathering to celebrate Juneteenth in Solvang Park, and is putting together a series of raw and real conversations about race. And she’s just getting started.  Air Force combat veteran, cryptologic linguist, MBA holder, entrepreneur, community activist, and mother to Madison, Vashti Wilson has courageously stepped into a leadership role to promote equality and justice in our community.

    Vashti’s daughter Madison has also become a local activist in her own right, partnering with the Book Loft to create Madi’s Treasure Box, raising over $3,000 (at last check) to donate multicultural books and multicultural skin tone crayons to local elementary schools.

    In our conversation we discuss Vashti’s eclectic resume, her experiences confronting racism, including racially motivated arrests both she and her bother experienced at the hands of police, her move to the Valley, and upcoming efforts to bring awareness, justice, and equality to our community.

    This episode is longer than previous episodes.  The second half includes a no holds barred discussion about Vashti's experience with racism and her ideas about how we, as community members, can make small differences that matter.  I hope you'll stick with it. 

    Also mentioned in this episode:  Dino Explorerz, Succulent Cafe, Bethania Lutheran, St. Mark’s in the Valley, Happyes Boxes, Solvang School, Laura McVicar, Randall Day, Chris Brown, The Book Loft, Pura Luna Apothecary, SYV Racial Justice Facebook group, Madi’s Treasure box GoFundMe.  To participate in the Raw Real Race Conversation Vashti mentions in this episode, please email her at VashtiWilson2020@gmail.com.

    Solvang Pedicab Tours is featured in Small Business Spotlight.

    SYV Stories
    en-usJune 25, 2020

    Ep. 11: James Kurowski - Family, Community, & Law Enforcement

    Ep. 11: James Kurowski - Family, Community, & Law Enforcement

    For many of us, the pandemic and recent social unrest has made it tougher to have meaningful conversations with friends and family about issues that affect us all.  But having these difficult conversations and listening to the people who are knowledgeable about these issues is important, perhaps now more than ever.  
    I recently exchanged thoughts with a friend about a video she posted on social media.  As the wife of a law enforcement officer, she shared her experiences with me and her candor allowed me to understand her perspective and expand my own.  That conversation led to my inviting her husband, law enforcement officer James Kurowski, to be my first guest for Season 2.  
    Prior to recording the episode, we met at a picnic table outside the school both of our children attend and in that hour I learned so much about the day to day experiences of law enforcement officers.  His perspective as a first responder in our community is one worth hearing.  
    In this episode, we discuss how James came to be a law enforcement officer, the early years of his career spent in Hawaii, why he and his growing family moved to the Santa Barbara County, and his more recent experiences and thoughts about his job in the past two weeks since the death of George Floyd. 
    Thank you to James Kurowski for showing his commitment to engage in meaningful discussions and community relations.  That is true leadership.
    As a disclaimer, the thoughts and opinions expressed in this episode are Mr. Kurowski’s own, and should not be interpreted as representing the views, policies, or opinions of any law enforcement agency.  

    Recovery Ranch and Recovery Outreach are featured in Small Business Spotlight. 

    SYV Stories
    en-usJune 11, 2020

    Ep. 10: Tamara Rowles - Moving Beyond Trauma to Find Community and Purpose

    Ep. 10: Tamara Rowles - Moving Beyond Trauma to Find Community and Purpose

    As we all hunker down in our homes to flatten the coronavirus curve, finding a guest for this week’s episode was a little difficult. So I asked my friend Chris Brown (my guest in Episode 3) to come back, this time to act as the interview host, so I can share my own personal story.  We sat the requisite 6 feet apart while discussing my childhood growing up in the other Valley (the San Fernando Valley), the tragic loss of my mother, and how that story both affected me in my career and relationships and how it’s now propelled me into this next phase of my life as a story collector. 

    In 1990, my brother, mother, and I fell 60 feet down a mountain in Big Sur.  My brother and mother were seriously injured, I was not.  She spent the next year as a quadriplegic.  No longer wishing to be a burden on our family, or to live with the pain of life in a wheelchair, she starved herself for 45 days until she passed away.  Just before she died, my mother, Marlene, gave me a recording of her voice, which I cherish to this day.

    In this episode, Chris and I discuss how that story has impacted me and how it’s helped me come to find my passion and purpose for this next phase of my life.

    You can find pictures of my mother and me, our beautiful ranch, as well as my family in the SYV at SYV Stories.

    The Maverick Saloon is featured in Small Business Spotlight.  Also mentioned in this episode are Santa Ynez MOPS, Bethania Lutheran Church, Allan Jones at Santa Ynez Valley Real Estate, Valley Wellness Collective, Santa Ynez Valley Historical Museum, Dovecote Ranch, and StoryGem

    SYV Stories
    en-usMarch 23, 2020

    Ep. 9: Manuel Guerrero - Humble Goals to Happy Family

    Ep. 9: Manuel Guerrero - Humble Goals to Happy Family

    Manuel is easy to talk to. He’s humble, interested in learning, and has one of the kindest faces you’ll ever see.  His smile is quick and genuine, and it always reaches his eyes.  Within five minutes of getting to know him you’ll understand how proud he is of his family. And he has good reason to be.  Both he and his wife grew up in the same small village in Jalisco, Mexico. Before they married, Manuel ventured to the Santa Ynez Valley with two humble goals: 1) to buy a pair of blue jeans, and 2) to buy his father a truck.  Two decades later, Manuel has accomplished every goal he’s dared to dream for his family.  

    In the next couple of years, he will have raised two college graduates.  Empty nesters, Manual and his wife Martha live in the caretakers’ house on 250 acres of beautiful Los Alamos land.  He lovingly tends to the landscaping and the horses and is at present pondering what the next 20 years of his life looks like.

    In our conversation, we discuss leaving his ancestral village to venture to the SYV, the challenges he faced when he arrived, his path to citizenship, and how he’s raised two happy and successful (almost) college graduates.

    Home Connection is featured in Small Business Spotlight

    SYV Stories
    en-usMarch 09, 2020

    Ep. 8: Russ Collins - Cattle Boat Captain

    Ep. 8: Russ Collins - Cattle Boat Captain

    While not technically a resident of the Santa Ynez Valley, this week’s guest was introduced to me by a listener who does live here and the stories my guest tells are closely connected to our way of life.  Russ Collins, a 90-year-old retired boat captain, has two interesting stories to tell about our beloved Santa Barbara coastline.  In January 1969, Collins was working as a boat captain ferrying crew members and supplies, when Platform A blew up, spilling 100,000 barrels of crude oil into the channel in what was at the time, the worst oil spill in history.  The aftermath of that spill and its catastrophic effect on marine life, later led to the creation of the US Environmental Protection Agency, the California Coastal Commission, and the passage of CEQA, California Environmental Quality Act. Collins tells his first-person account of that cleanup effort. 
    And, over two decades later, Collins captained the Vaquero II, a beautiful wooden 65 foot cattle boat, that ferried 100 head of cattle each trip between Port Hueneme and Santa Rosa island.  We reminisce about his time working alongside cowboys for Vail & Vickers, the owners of the island.  Photographs of the Vaquero II and Santa Rosa island may be found on the website.
    Aly's Restaurant is featured in Small Business Spotlight.

    SYV Stories
    en-usFebruary 24, 2020

    Ep. 7: Robbie Kaye - Artist and friend of the Majestic Oaks

    Ep. 7: Robbie Kaye - Artist and friend of the Majestic Oaks

    Robbie Kaye is the consummate artist: photographer, painter, musician, vocalist, and documentarian. Her photographs of three beautiful oak trees captured my attention on Instagram, but her support of female owned businesses gained my respect and admiration.  

    Week after week, Ladies of the Valley features inspiring women who are bosses at what they do.  It gives these women a platform to showcase their businesses and reveal and their unique origin story.

    In our conversation, we discuss trees, art, finding inspiration and your artistic voice, and of course, women supporting women. 

    More information about Robbie’s work can be found at robbiekaye.com. Robbie’s photographs are on display at Crawford Family Wine tasting room in Solvang.  Her resin work is on display at Helen’s Hair Studio in The Salon in Santa Ynez.  And to get a dose of daily inspiration from the women of this amazing community, check out Instagram.com/ladiesofthevalley.

    Also mentioned in this episode are Crawford Family Wines, Gypsy Studios, Maverick Saloon, The Salon in Santa Ynez, Helen’s Hair Salon, Brittany Davis Gallery, Valley Wellness Collective, Kelly Fiore, and Deb Davis.

    Global Gardens is featured in Small Business Spotlight.

    Ep. 6: William Etling - The Valley's Most Humble Historian

    Ep. 6: William Etling - The Valley's Most Humble Historian

    When my friend Abigail mentioned that her father-in-law, real estate broker William Etling, wrote a book about the Valley, I quickly downloaded a copy for my own research. Published in 2005, Sideways in Neverland is a collection from over 300 bi-weekly columns Etling wrote for the Santa Barbara News Press.

    Loosely grouped by topic, his columns cover everything from the best surf spots, to the history of the Mission, to jaunts at Neverland Ranch, and his adventures serving as an extra for three days on the set of the movie Sideways. As I immersed myself in these brief vignettes, I discovered Mr. Etling’s deep love for the Valley, its people, and topography, which shines through in his beautifully written prose.  He also has an irreverent fondness for some of the characters that make up our community and details their adventures and misadventures alike with flair.

    In our conversation, we discuss Mr. Etling’s childhood as a transplant from North Carolina, his experience writing columns for the Santa Barbara News Press, his adventures in Neverland and Sideways, his business as a real estate agent with Los Olivos Real Estate Co., and his love for the Santa Ynez Valley and its endless natural beauty.

    Mr. Etling’s book, Sideways in Neverland, may be downloaded or purchased here or here.

    Solvang Children’s Shop, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary in business, is featured in Small Business Spotlight. 

    Ep. 5: Linda Carlson - Ballard's Kindergarten Teacher & Tooth Fairy

    Ep. 5: Linda Carlson - Ballard's Kindergarten Teacher & Tooth Fairy

    Most parents who’ve been lucky enough to have their children taught by Mrs. Carlson will agree that she’s magical.  The children fancy her the Tooth Fairy, and they’re not wrong.  Mrs. Carlson has pulled dozens if not hundreds of wiggly teeth over the years, and she appears in full Tooth Fairy costume each Halloween for the Ballard Halloween parade.  

    From leprechaun traps, to runaway gingerbread men, to cities made of blocks and papier mâché animal wonderlands, Mrs. Carlson has done her very best to make kindergarten a magical time for hundreds of children over her nearly 40 years of teaching.

    The children also learn responsibility, problem solving, and independence in their brief time with her, skills they will carry with them throughout their lives.  

    As this year marks her very last at Ballard Elementary, I sat down with Linda Carlson inside the historic Little Red School house, where she has taught for the last 27 years, to reflect on her career and her deep love, respect, and endless fascination for our littlest scholars.  

    Also included in this episode are a few surprise special guests.

    Finally, the Giving Ink in Solvang is the first local business featured in Small Business Spotlight.

      

    Ep. 4: Claire Bettencourt - Old College Ranch Dairy and the first Vineyard

    Ep. 4: Claire Bettencourt - Old College Ranch Dairy and the first Vineyard

    Every episode I ask my guests to name people who they have come to respect or admire in this community. In Episode 1, Allan Jones mentioned that Boyd Bettencourt played a significant role in the planning commission several decades ago, which shaped our community through its zoning laws.  And while Boyd is no longer with us, Allan recommended I speak with his wife Claire.  

    Claire Bettencourt was born on the Old College Ranch, which her family purchased in 1923. At 95 years old, she’s seen this community grow from mostly dairy farms and cattle ranches to vineyards and thriving towns.  With tremendous foresight and a touch of boldness, the Bettencourts planted the first commercial vineyard in the Santa Ynez Valley.    

    Since the 50’s, the Bettencourts helped shape the community through their work with the Farm Bureau, 4H, and the Planning Commission.  Claire and I look back on her life in the Santa Ynez Valley in our wide-ranging conversation.

    Ep. 3: Chris Brown - Bethania's Unconventional Pastor

    Ep. 3: Chris Brown - Bethania's Unconventional Pastor

    When we moved here I sought out a deeper connection with my community, and that feeling progressed into exploring a deeper connection with faith.  While grappling with the question about the role faith should play in my life and that of my family, a while back a friend recommended that I go see Pastor Chris Brown.

    Rather than run to church, a place I’ve never felt comfortable, I decided to go with the safer route of friending and following him on Facebook.  Several months later, however, I finally took the plunge and checked out his worship service at Bethania.  When I walked through the door he greeted me by name, never having met me before.  As I listened to his sermon, what became clear is that Chris deeply cares about his congregation, this community, and anybody who is exploring tough questions about God and faith. 

    His approach is a little unorthodox: he encourages you to challenge any dogma or assumption you may have learned before about Christianity, and to place these assumptions, dogmas, and tenets in their historical context.  He also welcomes people of all faiths and no faith with equal fervor.  

    In our conversation we discuss how he became a pastor, his role in the church and our community, and his views on how Christianity can remain relevant in our lives.

    Ep. 1: Allan Jones - Santa Ynez Valley Real Estate Guru

    Ep. 1: Allan Jones - Santa Ynez Valley Real Estate Guru

    Allan Jones, President of the Santa Ynez Valley Real Estate Company, has been a distinguished resident of the valley since 1965.  The youngest of 4 brothers, the Jones family moved to the Santa Ynez Valley when Allan was just a few weeks old.  In 1977, after their 4H pig  project turned into a pig farm, the family bought and started the Pork Palace, which grew to 800 pigs.  Allan recalls how working daily at the pig farm kept these brothers out of trouble and taught them the value of hard work.  

    As a real estate broker for several decades, Allan has a unique knowledge and love of the Valley.  We discussed how in the early days when the founders wanted to create a European style community where smaller towns were surrounded by agricultural farms and ranches, they created zoning regulations to ensure properties outside of the towns remained larger parcels.  These zoning rules naturally control our community’s growth and preserve our rural way of life, as well as the natural beauty of our Valley.

    Allan’s commitment to serving the community is second to none.  He’s served as the Solvang July 4th parade announcer for twenty years, and even sits on the board of the Oak Hill Cemetery, among his other community service pursuits.  For his long record of service, he was honored by the Santa Ynez Valley Foundation as the 2018 Man of the Year. 

    Ep. 2: Raiza Giorgi - Publisher of the Santa Ynez Valley Star

    Ep. 2: Raiza Giorgi - Publisher of the Santa Ynez Valley Star

    I met Raiza Giorgi when our children attended preschool together shortly after we moved to the Valley.  We became friends at our bi-monthly MOPS (Mothers of Preschoolers) meetings.  I grew to admire and respect her when I freelanced for a short time as a contributing reporter at the Santa Ynez Valley Star, which she publishes along with Santa Barbara Family & Life Magazine.  

    During those early encounters, she expressed her interest in starting a local newspaper.  I watched her take that humble idea and turn it into the Santa Ynez Valley Star, the Valley’s local paper that you can pick up for free at any grocery store or coffee house.  The Star has become the Valley’s trusted source of news and events, public safety information, politics, along with heart warming stories about the people who make a difference serving this community.

    Raiza’s passion for reporting the events that matter to this community and her dedication to getting the story right earned her recognition for her tireless coverage of 2017’s Thomas fire and the tragic mudslides that followed in Montecito.  

    In our conversation, we discuss her childhood growing up here, her early days as a reporter at the Santa Ynez Valley News, and how she came to publish the Star. We also talk about her toughest experiences reporting on tragic murder-suicides.  Incidentally, our interview took place just a few days before the unspeakably tragic passing of Vanessa Bley and her two babies at Cold Springs Bridge on 154, where Raiza once again put aside her feelings to report the story despite her broken heart for the loss of a valued community member, acquaintance, and fellow mom.

    Raiza’s love for and dedication to this Valley comes through in every issue she publishes.  

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