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Posts Tagged ‘Penn Cove Shellfish’

Mitch (left) and Marc Aparicio (Photos courtesy Penn Cove Brewing Co.)

   Mitch (left) and Marc Aparicio hang out with their biggest booster. (Photos courtesy Penn Cove Brewing Co.)

old school

   High school days, when Marc (left) and Mitch were sports stars at Coupeville High School.

Two local brothers are about to brew up some sweet changes in Coupeville.

Mitch and Marc Aparicio, stellar Wolf athletes in the late ’80s who have gone on to launch successful careers and families, have reunited and are closing in on opening Penn Cove Brewing Co.

The business, which is scheduled to have a soft opening in late Jan. and a grand opening Feb. 7, will be located in the heart of the town.

It will sit at 103 S. Main, in between Harada Physical Therapy and Whidbey Natural Pet, right across the street from the Coupeville Elementary School.

When the duo kick off their new venture, they intend to make a big splash by becoming the go-to spot for craft beer.

Working with small, local breweries across Washington State, they will offer a wide selection of craft beer, many of which are currently only available at the breweries themselves.

They also intend to eventually brew and sell their own specialty craft beer and mead (honey wine) as the business grows.

The beers, and a healthy assortment of local wines, will be paired with food, including fresh seafood plucked out of nearby Penn Cove.

Initial plans are to offer a lunch menu, as well as small food plates for happy hour and dinner.

With their food, the brothers want to appeal to students and nearby office workers looking for a quick bite on their lunch break, as well as pairing their taste concoctions with drinks for those times when people are able to kick back and let the day wash away.

The key word in all of this is “local,” as the Aparicios want to involve the community on all levels, from the products they carry to creating a place where everyone can gather.

To do that, they will be working closely with others to use their new business to help promote local artists and musicians (Mitch is the longtime drummer and founder of classic rock band Jacobs Road).

After graduating from CHS in the late ’80s, the duo went off on different paths, with Mitch heading into sales and marketing while his younger brother became a career military man.

Marc retired from the United State Coast Guard earlier this year and has returned to live on Penn Cove. He was recently hired as the new head baseball coach at his alma mater.

With Mitch back on the Island since 2000, having brought his wife (fellow CHS grad Tami Stuurmans) and daughters home, he was waiting for a full-time brotherly reunion.

Now that the duo are back in the saddle again, the skies are the limit.

Blessed with a genuine passion for their product — they light up like kids on Christmas day when discussing craft beers — the Aparicios want to establish a business that is more than just another storefront.

They want to create a destination.

A place where, like on “Cheers,” everyone knows your name and memories are created over a great drink, a nice bite or two and a chance to be a vital part of a close-knit community.

And they’d love for each and every one of you to come along on the ride.

To find out more, pop over to:

http://www.penncovebrewing.com/home.html

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Shelby Kulz

Shelby Kulz

Shelby Kulz was always a good shot.

During her days on the hardwood for Coupeville High School, the 2012 grad drained her fair share of jumpers for the Wolf girls’ basketball squad.

Now she’s taken her keen shooting eye and turned it in the direction of film-making.

Kulz, who works as a picker on the harvest boat for Penn Cove Shellfish, just posted to YouTube a five-minute documentary film she shot depicting life and work on the water.

It’s the continuation of a skill she also showcased while at CHS.

“When I was in high school I did documentaries for History Day, but this is my first movie with all of my own footage,” Kulz said. “I plan on making more movies for Penn Cove in the near future, focusing on different parts of the company such as the warehouse and seed crew.”

When she’s not shooting, Kulz works in the heart of the mussel harvesting operation.

“What happens is when the mussel is pulled and goes through all the machines, it’s poured onto a conveyer belt and we have to pick out all the broken mussel, the barnacles, and the clumps of mussel called byss,” Kulz said. “From there it’s bagged out and sent to the warehouse.”

To see her film, “Penn Cove Shellfish: a GoPro documentary,” pop over to:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kg7TpfU_EP8

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Ian and Rawle Jefferds have given much to our community. Now we need to reach out and help their family.

  Ian and Rawle Jefferds have given much to our community. Now we need to reach out and help their family.

I hate mussels, but I have a great respect for Ian and Rawle Jefferds.

The brothers and co-owners of Penn Cove Shellfish loom large over our town, good men who have done much to make Coupeville a better place.

Every day, when I go down the Hill O’ Death in front of my house and plunge into Penn Cove, I am face-to-face with the mussel rafts they own and operate.

Their processing buildings sit up the hill from my house, and they could hit me with a well-thrown mussel, if they so chose.

Over the years, I have known both men and their families through my jobs — mainly from the many years at Videoville and Miriam’s Espresso — and I have stood next to Ian as he watched a derelict boat burn and threaten the very future of all that he and his family built.

While I will always bitch and moan about mussels and believe them to be the slugs of the sea, forever scarred by my time on the water working for a different, far less competent mussel harvesting company in my younger days, I embrace the Jefferds.

They are good people, they are our people.

And now they need our help.

Seth Jefferds, the middle brother in the family, is a volunteer firefighter in Oso, Washington. His life, like many others, has been devastated in the recent mudslide that decimated the area.

He has lost his wife and his home. His four-month-old granddaughter is among the missing.

Our help will not give him back his family, but it will give a good man hope.

It will show him we do not walk away and leave others to their pain. We help them, in any way we can, at any time we can, because we can. Because we should. Because there is no other way to live our lives.

We are Coupeville. If you are connected to one of us, you are connected to all of us.

Please visit:

http://www.gofundme.com/7s58tc

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