inland living
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inland living
INLAND LIVING MAGAZINE VOLUME 3, ISSUE 3 contents 18 ENTREPRENEURS · Rialto snowboard company practices Humanity 21 TASTE · Elegance and comfort food are served at Cafe Montclair 24 WINE · Expressive, affordable selections for spring 28 HEALTH . As technology evolves, medical imaging gets more precise 32 RETIREMENT • Moving doesn't mean it's time to say "goodbye" 34 CAREERS • Make a successful leap into a new line of work also Can't Miss and Arts & Culture 8; Dining 38; Seen 45; Nonprofit calendar 48 On the cover: Snowboarder Davis Poul at Mountain High in Wrightwood PHOTO BY PRI SCILLA IEZZI, CHE STUDIOS MAKEUP BY CHRISTINA M. GAUDY, CMG COSMETICS By CARLA SANDERS AV]S PAU L ce rtain ly knows how to land on hi s feet. And th e multi-spa n at hlete has done jus t that in the pas t few yea rs, as a standout college soccer player and on snowy terrain where he 's leavi ng hi s mark in the world of snowboarding. His laid-back conversational style gives little hin t to the dri ve n young m an who has car ved out a niche ro r him se li bo th on and o fr th e playing field . He auribmes hi s success to ti ming, great parents and a w illingness to be open about th e ru ture. "] have so many different interes ts," he says from Mammoth Lakes, where's he's o n a trip to he lp create a s nowboa rding video. "] wa nt to see w here life takes me" In his 21 years, it's alread y taken him from the sea to the snow and hack. Born in San Diego, he moved to La Ve rn e as a child . Durin g his eight h g rade yea r at EI Roble Intermedi ate School in Clare mont , he joined I he snowboa rd cl u b and bought a season pass to Mountain High . "My first year, 1 had a lot. of fun I had a lot of friends who were good , a nd 1 wa nted to be as good as th em . I lea rn ed a 10 l of tri c ks ," Pau l reca ll s. "The second season I got into th e video s ide of things. [love filmin g friends" Humanity snowboarder Davis Paul of Upland and UC Berkeley catches some air at Mountain High. PHOTO BY LAfONZO ' SNOWDOGG" CARTER --------------;-- ~ - - ~- ~---~---~- -- -~ --- -~- - ~ 'I love extreme sports and at 21, I've been able to work on the administrative side as well. I get to work the cameras and help set them up.' That filming led to offers from companies for product placement , which , in turn have aided Paul financially. "Since my second year of snowboarding, I haven't had to pay for any of the gear," he says enthusiastically. When he was a junior at Damien High School1n La Verne, his parents, Doug and Donna Paul, moved the family to Upland. By then he'd also become a stellar soccer player. At Damien, Paul led the team to back to-back Division 1 e lF titles as both the goal and points leader. In 2006, he was an NSCAA/adidas boys youth All-American and selected to the prestigious adidas Elite Soccer Program (ESP) He was one of 35 players chosen to play in the ESP All-Star Game that year. After graduation in 2007, he headed north to ue Berkeley on an athletic scholarship. In 2008 , he started 19 of 21 games for the Golden Bears, earning All-Pac 10 honorable mention honors. That year he also was a Pac 10 all-academic honorable-mention selection. Now a junior, he plays forward on the team. He expects to graduate after the fall term this year, and is majoring in marketing, advertiSing and American culture, a program he was allowed to devise himself to suit his particular interests, which circle right back to snowboard ing. While he enJoys riding, he's becoming more interested in the video production side of things~ "I love the marketing and adve rtising areas," he explains. Humanity rider Ryan Pluche, 18, of Camarillo slides along a rail a t Mountain High. When he's not on the soccer field at Calor working on a video, Damien High School grad Davis Paul likes to escape to the slopes. More (team) Humanity: Ryan Pluc:he It may ·be a bit early to call him "the other redhead," comparing him to Olympian and X Games friendShqun White, but 18-year-old Ryan Pluche of Camarillo is making his way as a Humanity Snowboards rider and a qualifier for the Volcom PB&Rj" fi nals at Mammoth· Mountain in April. ('PB&RJ That's the Peariut Butter & Rail Jam, Volcom's amateur snowboord contest ·series during which tricks, not falls, are judged. The national tour features 17 regional events leading up to a championship event at Mamrnoth. . . Peanut butte r a nd jelly sandwiches are served, of course.) Ryan has a friendly laid-back demeanor and says he got into the sport following his.fathei who was a Rossignol representdtive in Vermont. When he's not on the slopes, Pluche likes to cook and hopes to go to culinary schooL Videos arid more ciboul B uche may be found .· online at myspace.cotn/notryanpluche, . www.humanitysnow.com a nd www.vimec.corril7861443 . . PHOTO BY PRISCILLA IEZZI • • • • • • Spring Garden Tours / Weeken ds / March 20-May 16 Annual Wildflower Show / Saturday and Sunday / April 3 and 4 . Garden w ith a View / Sunday I May 2 / Claremont's Premier Garden Party National Public Gardens Day / Friday / May 7 Moth er's Day Brunch and Lunch I Sunday I May 9 I Two Seat ings Native Pla nt Clinics, Grow Native Nursery, Garden Shop and more .... RSABG.org 150,() North College Avenue • Claremont, CA 91711 · 909.625.8767 16 I inlandlivingmagazine.com I february- march 2010 "I love extreme sports and at 21, I've been able to work on the ad ministrative side as well. I get to work the cameras and help set them up. I'm young and balanCing all these aspects has been great." Since Division I soccer is "super time consuming" with all the travel, Paul says, he's only able to hit the slopes about 14-15 days a year. So, the "days I do go have to be productive; I have to progress at a quicker rate." These days he's helped by Humanity Boards of Rialto, which sponsors him . Financially, Paul receives free boards and often assistance with tickets for local mountains. He also helps the company with his inSight into new boards. For Paul, though, there are other bonuses. "There are a lot of intangible benefits that are equa lly valuable to me. Right now, it's about making contacts." He also va lues Humanity, the company "Humanity is a very family oriented team," he says. 'They're more about helping the commun ity and being bigger than what snoKboarding is." entrepreneurs I sport I 11 II I I I Director of development Daniel Malmese, left. with two of Humanity's co-owners, Ryan Monson and Tommy Czeschin PHOTOS BY LAFONZO CARTER I FINDING I; Rialto snowboard company takes a different course By AMY BENTLEY .1 I/! I·; UMANlTY SNOWBOARDS is more than juSt another business out to make a buck. It's a small, local online company, and its three owners have befriended snowboard enthusiasts nationwide who help promote the sport to underprivileged kids, do charity work and encourage other boarders to support each other too. The owners celebrate the sport, their business and H I, ~: 'I " ~r il '·1 ,. I 18 !I 1 inlandlivingmagazine.com 1 february-march 2010 everything their colleagues, called "Humanitarians," do to help others and advance the snowboarding life. "We wanted to implement our vision, and our vision was do what everybody ciaims to do or wants to do," said co-owner Ryan Monson of Rancho Cucamonga. "But we wanted to do it, not just say we're doing it." Monson is a snowboard deSigner and engineer who found ed the company in 2008 with former Olympic snowboarder Tommy Czeschin and snowboard artist Greg Huntoon, a childhood friend. 'It's a platform, a community, an evolution .... We're looking for people who care about riding the best boards, not the most expensive.' The fact that the company's owners each have other businesses and Jobs gives them the freedom to be socially conscious with Humanity Snowboards, Monson says. Czeschin also owns a laundry facility and a firewood business in the Mammoth area, where he lives, while Huntoon of Los Angeles also works full-time as the social media director for Break Media, a Los Angeles-based Internet company. Monson owns a snowboard manufacturing facility in Rialto where Humanity's snowboards and boards of other brands are made. "We're doing what we wa nt to do. It's not necessarily about the money," said Monson, 34, who has enjoyed snowboard ing since he was a teen. "We want people to come and be a pan of it with us. Anyone is welcome to call us, we're accessible, we're real people. We're about being part of the community." Humanity Snowboards' Web site, www.humanitysnow.com. states that philosophy in a much edgier way to appeal to hip, young snowboarders: "It's a platform , a community, an evolution . We're looking for people who care about riding the best boards, not the most expensive . Riders who spend as many days riding as possible. Kids who doodle slopes on their binders and wrangle with new tricks in their head instead of counting . stupid sheep." What's unique about this business which gets kudos from supporters and customers for manufacturing its boards in Rialto instead of China - is the company's "Humanitarian" program. The owners have created a network of snowboarding friends who help others and promote snowboarding; Humanity Snowboards offers them discounted snowboards and support. "We provide the Humanitarians with a lot of support to help them boost their careers and provide them with a product at cost so they do get it at a substantial discount. And they have the opportunity through word of mouth to earn money based on products that are sold based on their influence. Everything is tracked. Online orders are taken with a specific code," Monson explained. There are about 10 Humanitarians on board so far, and the company plans to grow the program this spring. Humanitarians must be involved with a charity or give back by doing a "humanitarian deed" in their community or by helping the snowboard ing community, Monson says. One volunteers a few times a month to serve meals at a shelter, while another in New York, Brian "Deka" Paupaw, creates small snowboarding experiences for inner-city kids at local parks after it snows to teach them the sport. Paupaw, a Brooklyn resident who hooked up with Humanity Snowboards inJuly, also started a nonprofit organization, The Hoods to 'vVoods Foundation, to introduce inner-city kids to snowboarding. Snowboarder Geoff lsringhausen of Riverside helps promote the sport by making snowboarding videos that are posted online. Another Humanitarian is longtime snowboarder Gary Anderson, 37, president of Ac tion Spons Mi nistries in Alexandria. Minn. Anderson hits the slopes a couple of times a week near his home with his Humanity board and sings its praises. "They've got the guys who really know what a board is supposed to ride like. I'm in love with it," said Anderson, who also coaches for snowboarding clubs and camps in his area. Anderson found Humanity through Tommy Czeschin , a friend-of-a-friend, and t~ey met last year in Mammoth when Anderson visited California. "One thing led to another," he said. Action Spons Ministries is a Christian nonprofit in Minnesota that works to Chris Espinoza, left, and factory manager Carlos Lopez craft new snowboards. february-march 20 to I inlandlivingmagazine.com I 19 ,,11. ,I provide faith-based opportunities for disadvantaged youths to get them involved in action sports by helping with scholarships, money to buy equipment and coaching. Anderson plans to order some discounted snowboards from Humanity for Action Spons Ministries, and he appreciates the charitable efforts of the owne rs. "It's a nice company. They're doing things a little different from the big industr y. Helping the guys that help in the community is a new concept," said Anderson , who noted that snowboarding is popular in Minnesota, which has some 20 ski resorts. As a company, Humanity Snowboards also helps Kiva (www.kiva.org), a lending program for low-income entrepreneurs around the globe. "We lend money to entrepreneurs. It may be a farmer in Africa or Europe who wants to expand their crop for the year and doesn't have the capital to buy more seeds," Monson said. Monson, Czeschin and Huntoon often use social networking sites such as Facebook and Tw itter to reach out to snowboa rders and their friends, and they frequentl y post photos and videos of their snowboarding pals on the Web. On Dec. 23, Monson posted a lighthearted video on the Humanity Web site and Facebook called , "Santa Shredd ing Hi s Humanity," of Isringhausen snowboa rding in a Santa costume with a couple of young skiers at Mountain High in Wrightwood. It looked like a merry Christmas indeed. Product profile Humanity Snowboards has six models for sale, ranging in price from $349 to $399. The newest board, released in early January, is the Midwest Twin, a slightly smaller board with a different shape specifically designed for riders in the Midwest who don't have huge mountains but ride on smaller or man-made hills. "It's called the Urban Shredding Movement." said company co-owner Ryan Monson. "It's growing like crazy. We're the only company at this point that has developed a board just for that." Humanity Snowboards are made at Monson Snowboards, a manufacturing facility in Rialto that Monson has owned for 13 years. The facility has six employees. Monson's was the first snowboard factory to use bamboo as a sidewall material. "We have found it to be a great alternative to plastic," Monson said. "It's super durable, and it's more eco-friendly." jl 'I I'" II AFRA'I D OF T'A'KING KBATH? Comfort, safety~and independence can be yours with a new ;1 :1 WALK~IN BATHTU~Bl! 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