As we prepare to celebrate Finnriver Cidery’s 15th anniversary this Fall, I am reflecting on the spiraling journey that has carried us to this moment, and the lessons offered along the way. Finnriver’s arc of growth has been full of connection and complexity, abundance and adaptation, chaos and creativity. Our first etched cider glasses featured a lovely line from poet Marge Piercy, with an invitation that inspired us by acknowledging the simultaneity of well laid plans and the unpredictable elements: “Let us make our gardens half artful and half wild to match our love.”
We’re celebrating this artful and wild path with a 15th anniversary celebration on September 21st, 2025. Friends, neighbors, former employees, current staff, long time customers, guests from near and far, land and community partners and collaborators of all kinds are invited to join us! Finnriver has been lovingly and carefully shaped by so many hands...and hearts and heads.
When my husband Keith and I — and our original land partners Kate Dean and Will O’Donnell —first purchased 33 acres in the Chimacum Valley from Lige and Kay Christian, we began to learn about the power of community vision, support and collaboration. With a remarkable local investor network, conservation easements from the Jefferson Land Trust, stream restoration work from the North Olympic Salmon Coalition and Jefferson County Conservation District, and a neighborhood network of farmers, we began to learn how rural communities care for each other and the land and waters that sustain them. We named the land ‘Finnriver’ after our families’ two toddlers, who called forth our deepest hopes for the world they would grow up in, and our responsibility to the future.
We teamed up with our valley friend and neighbor Eric Jorgensen in 2008 to explore making cider with organic apples, and although we did not know exactly what it would become, we knew what we hoped it could be. It was always more than cider! It was about connection. All three of us had spent our 20s working outdoors as environmental educators. Two of us went on to become public school teachers. We arrived at Finnriver with a deep commitment to education and to building community on the land. We were guided by ecological ethics and by the wisdom of age-old land-based traditions, and by contemporary thinkers, writers and activists who were re-centering our relationship to Earth.
Eric, Keith and I came to identify ourselves as the “Head”, “Hands”, and “Heart”, recognizing the unique roles we played in our rustic, hand-hewn, three-legged leadership stool. A few years later, Andrew Byers joined as Head Cidermaker, and we imagined him as the “hemoglobin,” carefully crafting the liquid that became the lifeblood of the cidery. And now, after a remarkably smooth and successful founder transition, Amanda Oborne has beautifully integrated the Head and the Heart together as our new CEO—carrying us forward for the love of land, the art of farming, and the spirit of community! Meanwhile, Chris Weir, who began working at the Cidery as a young man, is now leading the cidermaking program and producing bottles full of wild and artful beauty.
Finnriver has always held the intention to live in humble and grateful relationship to the land that sustains us. Our hope was that with a sip of the cider (made from organic fruit grown with a sense of accountability to the land) or a visit to the farm and Cider Garden, people would feel a restored sense of kinship and connection. We’ve talked a lot over the years about inviting people to drink in the beauty… and about how we could serve the land with cider. The adventure to enact these intentions has been wholehearted and sometimes confounding— offering many branching opportunities, like the light-reaching limbs of an apple tree. We’ve never ceased to wonder at the miracle of a ripe apple at the end of a growing season! With similar wonder we get ready to celebrate this 15th anniversary milestone for Finnriver cidery and for the fruits we’ve been able to gather and share together with all of you.
Our 15th anniversary is an opportunity to reflect on our lessons, celebrate our growth, and to renew our vows to care for people and place.
Thank you for your connection to Finnriver and for celebrating this milestone with us here or there!
Fondly,
Crystie Kisler
Finnriver Co-founder, farmwife