Thursday, August 14, 2014

Frank Herbert, craft beer photojournalist

I took a short break from this blog to complete school - and to finish my first book!

Before Frank Herbert wrote "DUNE" and became a best-selling sci-fi writer, he wrote for The Santa Rosa Press Democrat from April 1949 to September 1953. I spent the last couple months going through old microfilm records, and compiled 138 lost news articles written by Frank Herbert.

Most amazing, I found a couple photos "by Frank Herbert" highlighting the local craft beer industry, back in 1952. On photo bears the caption, "Truckload of hop vines is swung into automatic stripper." The hops must flow!

Another photograph Frank Herbert took show a troop of Boy Scouts boarding a bus. Shown clearly in the background is the old Grace Brothers Beer sign, which proudly proclaims, "Product of Sonoma County." In the last couple years here in Sonoma County, a huge push has begun to promote our local wine, beer and cheese.  Not only is this local movement older than people think, but it was documented by a famous sci-fi writer!

I'm publishing a first edition of 1,000 copies, and set up an Indiegogo project to fund it. If you have friends who love science fiction, you should tell them about this book of Frank Herbert's Lost Archives: igg.me/at/FrankHerbert

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

College paper puts Russian River on the map

The Santa Rosa Junior College newspaper, Oak Leaf News, published a map of Sonoma County's 20 breweries for their Pliny the Younger issue.

Oak Leaf News also announced an upcoming new beer brewing/hospitality program at SRJC. What will those wacky kids think of next?

Copyright 2014 by SRJC Oak Leaf News - published with permission

Monday, February 10, 2014

New beer program at Santa Rosa Junior College

[Originally posted in Oak Leaf News Feb. 10, 2014]

A new beer-related program may soon bubble up at Santa Rosa Junior College. “We’re looking at the situation,” said SRJC president Dr. Frank Chong. “We need the resources and we need industry support – like we’ve got for our wine programs – so we can target the needs of the industry.” SRJC currently offers degrees in viticulture and wine making as well as certificates for wine-based business and hospitality.
Chris Wills teaches the Wine Studies Program and runs SRJC’s award-winning Shone Farm Winery in Forestville, founded in 2008. “With the talent we have in Sonoma County, we could have a world-class brewing program,” Wills said. “I think we could offer a certificate program as an alternative to the brewing program offered by UC Davis. There is already talk of an ‘intro to fermented foods’ class, possibly in the sustainable agriculture program.”
Wills said this entry level class would feed into focused courses like cheese making, malting barley, brewing beer and fermenting fruits and vegetables.
“We used to have a Community Ed course in brewing taught by Bryon Burch, who used to own The Beverage People,” Wills said. “I don’t know why it stopped.”
Lagunitas Brewing Company’s marketing director Ron Lindenbusch expressed interest in supporting a fermentation sciences program. “Beer hospitality would be a great  class,” he said. “We’d love to be in it!”
Wills encourages any local brewers to contact him at cwills@santarosa.edu with any feedback on creating SRJC’s new beer brewing and hospitality courses.