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Chad Rickner is ending a 25-year run as a teacher and turning his full attention to the dark art of coffee bean roasting. (Photos courtesy Megan Rickner)

Great coffee for great people.

That’s the slogan driving Chad Rickner, who recently retired from a 25-year teaching career to fully focus on his new love, running Coupeville Coffee Roasters.

Officially launching in 2022, the bean biz is booming, and with budget cuts looming in the school district, it seemed a perfect time to embrace a “second act” career.

Not that Rickner didn’t go out without a bang, however.

His final day as a PE teacher at Coupeville Elementary — a job he’s held since 2017 — was supposed to be June 16.

But, while setting up for the school’s Field Day earlier in the week, Rickner took a header off of wet bleachers while stretching out a parachute to dry.

The normally spry teacher dropped four feet, with the ground delivering a KO on impact.

Rickner lost the fight with Mother Earth, suffering a concussion, possible torn rotator cuff, lower back muscle spasms, and a variety of new and interesting bruises.

Which still didn’t slow his roll.

“Apparently, he just couldn’t wait three more days and had to go out with a bang,” said wife Megan with a laugh.

“He’s doing much better now, but it was hard to keep him down and not roasting!” she added. “He’s back at it this week and soooooo loving every single second.”

Home for the holidays.

Rickner’s steamy romance with coffee began early, when his 12-year-old lips first came into contact with what he now describes as a “terrible” cup of joe.

While that initial taste left him wanting, he remained in close contact with the caffeinated beverage over the years, his love for the coffee bean growing as his knowledge deepened.

“He loves learning everything he can about it – reading, watching YouTube, speaking with other professionals, going to coffee conventions,” Megan Rickner said.

“Basically, devouring everything he can about coffee.”

Chad Rickner made the move into roasting his own beans in 2021, after purchasing a small sample roaster.

A year later, he was the proud owner of a much-larger device, weighing in at 1,000+ pounds, and he hasn’t slowed down since.

A member of the Specialty Coffee Association, Rickner focuses on roasting small batches of high-grade green coffee, with an emphasis on using beans which are ethically sourced.

Chad realized he could make freaking amazing coffee and was just so excited and passionate about it, that he decided to jump in and buy the big one and make a go of it,” Megan Rickner said.

“We never expected it to take off as quickly as it did.

“His passion is contagious, word of mouth traveled, and he has been so busy that it’s been difficult to find time to do both jobs.”

Coupeville Coffee Roasters sells both direct to local customers, and online, and their product is popping up in more and more shops and restaurants.

With the school year winding down, and a contract in hand to supply a coffee shop and coffee stand with all their beans, the time seemed perfect for Chad Rickner to turn two jobs into one.

That brings an end to a teaching career which has carried him between multiple countries.

Rickner’s parents worked for the Department of Defense, with his father teaching in Japan and Germany, instilling a love of travel in their son, and he bounced around the globe as a young adult.

Coming out of college, he started teaching in Hong Kong, then returned to America to work in Oklahoma.

After that came stints in China and the Netherlands, a side jaunt to Japan, and, finally, settling down for good on Whidbey Island.

Rickner taught PE and coached basketball during his time overseas, and both of his sons, TJ and Grady, went on to play God’s chosen sport during their days at Coupeville High School.

All about that hoop life.

After purchasing a home in Oak Harbor in 2004, the family spent summers on Whidbey, before returning overseas during the school year.

Once back on The Rock for good, Rickner moved to Coupeville full-time in 2019, with plans to be around for quite some time.

“We will never leave this amazing community!” he said in a Facebook post announcing his retirement as a teacher.

That love for his current home is one his wife has seen grow.

“He made some really great lifelong friends and was able to finally become part of a community as a permanent resident,” Megan Rickner said. “He loves that.

“Going to our kids’ sports games and seeing his students, going to restaurants and knowing the servers, seeing friends everywhere.

“Basically, everything the rest of us love about the community, he was able to start that at CES and broaden it the longer he lived here.”

Reelin’ them in.

As he moves into the full-time bean biz, Chad Rickner has tasty, toasty dreams.

Coupeville Coffee Roasters product will start popping up at local farmers markets and festivals, and he plans to create more videos to share his coffee passion.

A people person, Rickner enjoys the social side of producing coffee.

“He loves having people drop in to watch a roast or try the coffee with a “cupping” session,” Megan Rickner said.

“He doesn’t ever want the company to become anything other than a successful, local, community-centric business that allows for personal connection with clients and customers.”

So, don’t expect Coupeville Coffee Roasters to “go big,” but do expect to see its beans become available in more island coffee shops, restaurants, and stores.

With more time on his hands, Chad Rickner is primed to travel to the farms which supply his beans, in an effort to “learn more and make that direct connection more personal.”

There might even be a bit of brick and mortar in the future.

“We’d love to open a roastery in downtown Coupeville, so he can connect with local community members more, have a storefront for selling, and hold coffee education classes/demonstrations,” Megan Rickner said.

“He loves our community so much, so to move the roastery from our property to a place that’s easier for locals to find and visit would be a dream.”

 

For more info on Coupeville Coffee Roasters, pop over to:

https://www.coupevillecoffeeroasters.com/

 

Riding off to new adventures.

Hoops hotshot Skylar Parker pauses during summer ball to let mom snap a close-up. (Corinn Parker photo)

I am not a photographer.

With the exception of one (accidentally) well-timed high school wrestling pic I snapped 30 years ago during my Whidbey News-Times days, no one is likely to look at anything I’ve shot and be like, “dang, David.”

So, it’s a good thing so many people have allowed me to use their photos here on Coupeville Sports over the past 11 years.

From my first steady contributor — Wolf Mom Shelli Trumbull — to my busiest one — Diet Coke-fueled paparazzi John Fisken — their contributions have been invaluable.

And this past school year has been an especially strong one.

I don’t know 100% for sure, but it certainly feels correct when I say that we ran photos from more photographers this time around than at any time in the past.

Fisken was a constant presence, as always, though other commitments pulled him away from my blog at times and opened up a lot of opportunities for others.

Chief among those who stepped up to provide a fresh spin on the photographic arts was CHS yearbook advisor Jackie Saia, and her many students.

Bailey Thule, Chloe Marzocca, Lucy Tenore, Carlota Marcos Cabrillo, Brenn Sugatan, Helen Strelow, Delanie Lewis, Andrew Williams, and Brionna Blouin all shot pics which graced the blog this school year.

A brilliant student who went to the state championships in two different sports, Helen Strelow both snaps pics, and poses for them. (Brian Strelow photo)

One thing which I noticed was you get a different perspective a lot of times when teenagers are taking photos of their fellow classmates.

There is a different relationship at work than when it’s an adult behind the camera, and the student photographers captured some of my favorite images of the year.

Not that we want the adults to put down their cameras or phones.

From coaches who snap pics, to school board directors who wield cameras, there are 10,001 photographers out there, and we’re lovin’ it.

Having a pack of Wolf Moms (and dads, and grandparents, and cousins, and uncles and aunts) who snap photos, then are willing to share them with the world at large through Coupeville Sports sets the blog apart from its competitors.

If there’s anything people like more than seeing their names in bold, it’s seeing their faces in pics.

Way back at the start, the first couple of stories on Coupeville Sports were just words, and no photos, but that changed fast.

No matter how good the writing is, the photo (and the headline) are the first things people see, and you need to suck readers in before they can appreciate any wordsmithing.

So, a huge thank you to each and every person who has graciously allowed me to use their images this school year, and over the past 11 years.

Coupeville Sports would truly not be the same without your images.

As we roll forward into the summer season, while looking ahead to a new school year starting in a few months, keep your cameras and phones clicking.

And keep me in mind.

If you shoot it, I probably want to share it, and you can reach me at davidsvien@hotmail.com or message me over on Facebook.

Remember, the Wolf Nation that shares photos is the Wolf Nation we need.

All the action, all the intensity, all the colors of fall. (Morgan White photo)

Madison McMillan (right) crunched a home run Sunday, impressing teammate Jada Heaton. (Photo courtesy Jennifer Heaton)

Everything was clicking.

The glove work was nearly impeccable. The pitching was overpowering.

And the bats? They were booming.

Putting together a rock-solid run Sunday, the Whidbey Island Thunder 18U softball squad rolled to its first tourney title of the season.

Cruising to 10-5 and 13-0 victories, the sluggers, who feature seven Coupeville players, were Silver Bracket champs at the School’s Out Invite in Mount Vernon.

“I couldn’t be more proud of the girls and this win,” said head coach Matt Suto. “It was a total team effort all weekend, and every player contributed.

“The girls absolutely tore the cover off the ball and played stellar defense behind great pitching from Grace Swenson.”

The flame-throwing hurler, one of two Sedro-Woolley players on the roster, was in control all day.

After blitzing through the Sparks in Sunday’s opening game, Swenson was 99.2% perfect in the championship tilt against the Venom Elite.

She faced just 10 hitters across three innings of work, with the Thunder ending the finale early thanks to the mercy rule.

Nine of those Venom batters went down meekly, with three striking out, and the lone player to reach base did so painfully after getting plunked by the imposing Swenson.

Coupeville’s Taylor Brotemarkle (left) and Sedro-Woolley ace Grace Swenson played strongly all weekend. (Kimberly Brotemarkle photo)

Whidbey broke the championship game open early, slapping five runs on the board in the bottom of the first.

Cranking out the hits, the Thunder got base knocks from Taylor Brotemarkle, Layla Suto, Madison McMillan, Swenson, Loto Tupu, and Jaymie Kallio, and didn’t stop there.

Three more runs in the second — fueled by three hits after they were working with two outs — stretched the lead to 8-0, then Whidbey coasted in for the win.

Layla Suto put a final punctuation mark on things with a resounding double back up the middle, coasting into second base as the Venom coach trudged across the field to surrender to his Thunder counterparts.

The semifinal game was a little closer than the championship game, but not by much.

Whidbey jumped out to a 7-0 lead, ringing up three runs in the top of the first and another four in the second frame to build a lead it wouldn’t relinquish.

The opening assault came thanks to a barrage of extra-base hits, with Brotemarkle and McMillan crunching doubles, while Layla Suto smoked a three-bagger to deep right field.

The coach’s daughter, coming off of an impressive freshman season at Oak Harbor High School, came back around to crack a double an inning later.

Before the Sparks could recover their mojo, the very next hitter, Coupeville’s longball-lovin’ Madison McMillan, went deep.

Belting a home run to dead center, the junior-to-be permanently snuffed out any lingering hopes of a comeback by her rivals.

Overall, the hard-hitting duo accounted for 11 RBIs across Sunday’s two games, with McMillan sending six runners careening for home, while Suto knocked in five of her teammates.

Swenson and Brotemarkle were hot on their heels, each picking up three RBI on the day.

From there, the Thunder defense, anchored by Coupeville catcher Teagan Calkins, went into lock-down mode.

“Just killer defense from the entire team,” Matt Suto said. “This is the momentum we need to roll into Tri-Cities next weekend for the NSA state tournament.”

The champs. (Kimberly Brotemarkle photo)

The Thunder have a 14-woman roster most days, but picked up Oak Harbor’s Addison Morales for the weekend, and she pitched for the team in pool play.

Swenson and Kallio hail from Sedro, while Ramona Ryder, Lilly Norman, McKayla Smith-Day, Layla Suto, and Loto Tupu call Oak Harbor home.

Coupeville players fill out half the roster, with Calkins, McMillan, and Brotemarkle joined by Allie Lucero, Haylee Armstrong, Jada Heaton, and Maya Lucero.

 

Championship bracket stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — Four singles, one double
Teagan Calkins — One single
Jaymie Kallio — Three singles
Allie Lucero — One single
Maya Lucero — Two singles, one double, one walk
Madison McMillan — Two singles, one double, one home run
Lilly Norman — One single
Ramona Ryder — Two singles
McKayla Smith-Day — One single
Layla Suto — Two singles, two doubles, one triple
Grace Swenson — Three singles, two walks
Loto Tupu — One single, one walk

Kwamane Bowens, a fashion icon who can also de-cleat you on the gridiron. (Photo courtesy Bowens)

Don’t hurt ’em, Kwamane!

Whoops, too late.

Former Coupeville High School football coach Kwamane Bowens is pulling double duty these days, working with a new generation of gridiron stars in Anacortes, while still bringing the thunder on the field.

Bowens, who is also finding time to get married, achieve academic excellence, and drop fresh music at a dizzying rate as Groovie Mane, pulls on the pads for the Everett Royals semi-pro squad.

The former NCAA D-I scholarship player leads his current team in tackles, having rung up 20 through the first three games of the season.

The Royals, who also have former Coupeville QB Dawson Houston on their roster, sit in first place in the Impact Eastern Conference of the Gridiron Developmental Football League.

Everett (2-1) returns to the field this coming Saturday, June 24 to host the Wenatchee Valley Storm, who are 0-3.

The Royals have found a great deal of success on the defensive side of the field, with Bowens and Co. holding their foes to a combined 28 points.

The other three squads in their division have all surrendered 60 or more points.

Bowens has played strongly in all three games, recording a season-high nine tackles against the Seattle Seminoles.

A Coupeville student in his younger days, the multi-threat talent returned to Cow Town after his college playing days, working as an assistant to head coach Marcus Carr.

Among the players Bowens helped train is Wolf grad Sean Toomey-Stout, currently playing for the University of Washington.

The football lifer was an assistant coach at Anacortes High School this past fall, helping guide a Seahawk team which went 9-2, falling 10-7 in a state quarterfinal nailbiter to eventual 2A runner-up North Kitsap.

Coupeville’s Maddie Georges rocks her All-State basketball uniform. (Suzan Georges photos)

One more chance to earn some floor burn.

A week after graduating from Coupeville High School, hoops hotshot Maddie Georges capped her prep sports career by playing in the Washington All-State Girls’ Basketball Games.

The event, held Saturday at the HUB Sports Center in Yakima, featured some of the best players in the Northwest across three games.

Georges suited up for the West squad in the 2B/1B game, while other contests pitted 1A/2A players and 3A/4A hoopsters.

Ready to rumble.

Repeatedly drilling three-balls from deep, while employing a full-court press defense into the waning moments of the game, the East came out on top 99-64 in the 2B/1B tilt.

Colfax sophomore Brynn McGaughy, the 2B state player of the year during the 2022-2023 season, was tabbed as the game’s MVP.

A six-foot-two post who has already been offered a full ride by NCAA D-I power Stanford, she was one of seven East players who are 5-10 or taller.

The West, which featured players from top teams like Neah Bay and Lummi Nation, only had two girls who topped 5-8.

Among the best of the best. 

Georges, the only West player who consistently drained her free throws in the all-star game, was one of two players hailing from the Northwest 2B/1B League.

The Wolf gunner was joined by Orcas Island sophomore Ava Ashcraft.

With her high school days behind her, Georges is off to Western Washington University in the fall.

During her time at CHS, the younger sister of Alex and Taylor Evans was a two-sport star, excelling for Wolf volleyball and basketball teams.

Georges was an All-Conference selection in both sports and joined fellow Wolf senior Alita Blouin in playing in the 1B/2B/1A All-State volleyball games.

As a basketball star, she ran the point for the Wolves, finishing as the #24 career scorer in Coupeville’s 49-year program history, despite being a pass-first player who lost a chunk of games to the pandemic.

Always looking for the smart pass, always looking to set up teammates for success.

In the days leading up to graduation, Georges received the Cliff Gillies Award, named in tribute to a longtime Executive Director of the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association.

That honor recognizes student/athletes who excel in scholarship, citizenship, and participation in activities.