In this episode of Uncorked: Wine-Business-Life, hosts Bill Green and Jerrold Colton sit down with Devon Perry, the dynamic Executive Director of the Garden State Wine Growers Association. Devon shares her passion for elevating New Jersey’s wine industry and how the state is overcoming the stigma of being a lesser-known wine region.Devon discusses the rapid growth of New Jersey wineries, the importance of collaboration among vineyard owners, and the strategic initiatives aimed at increasing the visibility of local wines on the national and international stage. As a passionate advocate for local agriculture, Devon's leadership has been instrumental in connecting winemakers and driving innovation across the state.The episode also delves into Devon’s background, from launching digital initiatives at the American Red Cross to pioneering wine-friendly dining databases. Her relentless drive and commitment to the New Jersey wine community make this conversation both inspiring and insightful.Tune in to learn how the Garden State is transforming into a thriving wine destination and how local producers are making a name for themselves with bold, high-quality wines. Cheers to New Jersey wine!
In this episode of Uncorked: Wine-Business-Life, hosts Bill Green and Jerrold Colton sit down with Devon Perry, the dynamic Executive Director of the Garden State Wine Growers Association. Devon shares her passion for elevating New Jersey’s wine industry and how the state is overcoming the stigma of being a lesser-known wine region.
Devon discusses the rapid growth of New Jersey wineries, the importance of collaboration among vineyard owners, and the strategic initiatives aimed at increasing the visibility of local wines on the national and international stage. As a passionate advocate for local agriculture, Devon's leadership has been instrumental in connecting winemakers and driving innovation across the state.
The episode also delves into Devon’s background, from launching digital initiatives at the American Red Cross to pioneering wine-friendly dining databases. Her relentless drive and commitment to the New Jersey wine community make this conversation both inspiring and insightful.
Tune in to learn how the Garden State is transforming into a thriving wine destination and how local producers are making a name for themselves with bold, high-quality wines. Cheers to New Jersey wine!
Uncorked: Wine, Business, and Life with Bill Green & Co-Host Jerrold Colton
Kind: captions
Language: en
welcome to Uncorked wine business and
life with Bill Green I'm Gerald Colton
your co-host with Bill Green Bill Green
the proprietor of Saddle Hill and we are
here at beautiful Saddle Hill and where
exactly are we Bill we are in our really
big barrel room where we store our
barrels at about 55 degrees and 65%
humidity and these wines will sit here
uh for 12 to 15 months before they go
into a bottle or before they get Blended
to go into a bottle so there is a lot of
wine that we are sitting with there's a
lot well um about 10,000 cases worth of
wine in here and you notice we did the
we did the walls in burgundy so when we
spilled the stuff right and splatters
you have to clean it up it's it's a
beautiful room it's got a great feel to
it and it even smells good in here
smells amazing we have a very special
guest today we do we have somebody
you've known for a while and you're
experienced now as being a New Jersey
wine grower and maker and she is the
person who is the person in New Jersey
wine Growers and we really want to
welcome our very special guest Devin
Perry the executive director of Garden
State wine growers association hi Devon
thanks for joining us thank you for
having me today it is our pleasure
people probably aren't very familiar
with it I wasn't certainly and you know
reading up and and learn about your
organization it's quite an organization
so first US tell us who New Jersey wine
grow is are so the Garden State wine
growers association is the official
nonprofit representing all wineries in
the beautiful Garden State we like to
call ourselves the Garden State wine
Growers as we talked about earlier
because a lot of people frankly throw
some shade on New Jersey for making wine
and we're the ogs of growing things as
you know with our tomatoes and our corn
and our blueberries and our cranberries
I think that we are forced to be
reckoned with internationally and Bill
you have talked previously about sort of
a little bit of prejudice or people
looking down their nose at New Jersey
and I know that's a big passion of yours
and obviously Devon is the master yeah I
mean you know like you and I have talked
about before when this opportunity first
came to me about being able to build um
grow you know start a Vineyard and build
a winery and New Jersey the concept just
wasn't there and um you know Garden
State wine growers association I was in
touch with them
before I even bought the property wanted
to learn about it what was going on I
think at the time three and a half years
ago there was 54 now they're 60 so um
it's a growing organization and you know
Devon has just been absolutely amazing
and I think she is kind of like a oneman
wrecking crew and is absolutely oh and
woman whatever uh gender neutral here on
Court and um she's just taking this
thing to the next level and and it's
been really awesome watching it and she
you know when I see somebody like Devon
with the passion that she has for this
organization and what she does she
convinced me to be on her board so it's
kind of why Deon and I talk to each
other probably five times a week she's
using my 6:30 a.m. call I will say I was
just about to out us for being on the
phone before the sun comes up um and I
think that one of the reasons why uh
genuinely is because we have so many
ideas between the two of us for the
entirety of the association for all
wineries in New Jersey and it's critical
that we do not allow for the um the
perception from our rearview mirror to
shape our future so Bill and I have um
Concepts that are grounded in Sound
business logic um that are driving um
the next chapter for the association in
New Jersey wineries and what I wait let
me on this note because I get these
calls at some crazy times it's true and
the her you never heard somebody so
excited and she's going on and and I'm
telling you she's like a a 14-year-old
kid telling this telling a story on how
excited she is and how do you just not
buy into that talking about work
everybody oh it's work yeah we're an
idea for 2027
no exactly but we do talk about business
wine and our purpose is and life and our
purpose is to entertain to educate and
Inspire and you guys are both extremely
inspirational and Bill's an early riser
I get hit with emails really early
doesn't usually call me or bother me and
I don't want to wake Amy up if she's
sleeping but but but the fact is that I
know you wake up hitting the floor
running every day and obviously you guys
seem like a perfect match from that
standpoint as the passion you both bring
so why don't you talk a little Devon
about your background and the passion
you have in wine and where it came from
and how got you into the position you
are now I'm happy to so um Once Upon a
Time our family um who loves a good
spreadsheet developed developed a
spreadsheet that's a business part
developed a spreadsheet that cataloged
restaurants where we um we visited it we
didn't have to be frequenters of those
restaurants it could be a one-off um we
would Mark who ordered what um what
wines we brought and how we rated what
we ordered so it evolved into an online
restaurant database for Philadelphia and
Greater Miami really because that's
where my grandparents lived at the time
sound familiar and we decided that the
reason why this um spreadsheet came
together and why other people might be
interested not in our assessment of you
know duck coni or french onion soup but
where you could bring a bottle of wine
so as you can see just with our
background here um what we're looking at
similar to Bill and I imagine this
happens with you all the time when
you're traveling you want to bring your
own bottle of wine but you want to
follow the rules what are the rules um
is there a corkage fee if there is a
corkage fee how much is it so we had a
team of um Amazon Mechanical Turk if
you're familiar with murk where you can
hire people to do micro projects so we
paid individuals based on those micro
projects and we had them calling and
calling and call calling in 10 major
Metro centers eventually um every
restaurant to find out what the ratings
were for every restaurant in all 10
major Metro centers it wasn't something
I did on my own and then we launched
goo.com which was an online restaurant
database serving 10 major Metro centers
with a focus on wine friendly ratings
that genuinely started in a simple
spreadsheet that's fabulous and we're
here in Vorhees New Jersey right next to
Cherry Hill and across the river from
Philadelphia I live in Philadelphia and
the BOS are fabulous over there so
please explain for anybody who doesn't
know what a corkage fee is so um a BYOB
or a bring your own bottle restaurant
allows for you to Simply bring wine um
and or other um beverages to the
restaurant to enjoy the corkage Fe
specifically refers to wine so it's that
act of uncorking the bottle of wine
which nowadays with twist offs I think
still includes twist offs for anyone
trying to get around that regulation and
the corkage fee um it's also um in
certain cities and certain states there
are different laws so we always
encourage people to or we encouraged
people to take a look at what the local
municipality had at as its law just
because someone said that they brought a
bottle of wine somewhere they could have
a different general manager the laws
could have changed so there it is a
little bit of a moving Target and where
they won't necessarily let them use it I
mean I've been that have their own
liquor license that have yeah yeah like
was I had dinner at Barkley Prime last
week and it was $50 to open up a bottle
of wine but it was a very expensive
bottle of wine so I didn't you know I
didn't care to pay it right and then you
can go to other places where it's 15 or
they won't even charge you they're so
happier there and they have liquor
licensees so it's traditional boo
they're not charging anything but it's
really you want to go to more than
boobs so my question Devin is as as you
know just a consumer going out for
dinner should I not feel badly about
bringing a bottle of wine with me to a
place that does have a liquor license if
it's New Jersey
wine no in all seriousness there are um
a lot of wonderful restaurants out there
that are actively right now trying to
research how to have more New Jersey
wine on their lists that I think is the
Magic Bullet and and Bill um I and
obviously Evan's passion is infectious
and I can imagine when she asked you to
be on the board it was an easy yes but
tell me about what what made you
interested in joining that something you
are passionate about a lot of things you
are very benevolent and you own lots of
boards so tell me about her asking you
when you accepting that board request uh
she asked me to be on the board and then
a couple days
later she said I want you to be the
finance chair and I said oh come on
that's like watching paint dry right
like I don't want to be but I'll do this
for you for the first year and um now
she's appointed me the marketing chair
which I'm not exactly sure but I will
tell you the reason why I'm on the board
other than the fact that with the energy
that Devon brings is that and we have to
be a team it's one of the things I love
about the industry you know I can call
20 different wine owner Winery owners in
New Jersey and say hey how' you guys do
this you know with non-competitive
information and we all kind of help each
other so it's really just being a team
and being en forceful I mean try to take
you know pisses me off that New Jersey
is number 11 in the country is wine uh
producing uh state in ky's number 10 m
and that's just wrong we do have more
horses though don't we we have more
horses we have more horses I have horse
themed Winery right we have more horses
in Kentucky we do that's crazy because
it's known for their horses I hope
someone's factchecking right
now I think we do and I've heard that
before but you know with Devin as our
leader of all the Wier
together I mean she's got us talking to
people from Italy that want to bring her
wine over and like I think this thing's
going to explode I want to be on the
front of it that's why and Devin there
were a couple comments that have already
been made that that strike me and I'm
sure anybody listening which is I think
Bill you said the number that what we
were 54 wineries when you or wine
producers when you started just a few
years or recently you know a few years
ago and now they're 60 which is
basically a 10% rise in a short time I
mean what is happening with with Jersey
wines and are you seeing a real growth
and and awareness what's outstanding is
you know it really does take a
commitment to agriculture in order to
invest in a winery in New Jersey and it
is not easy so the growth as you stated
and I do love math but I'm not going to
be able to um give you percentage growth
in the rest of what I have am about to
say doing we had six a growth and it's
now at 60 so X over 100 plus so what
what I do know is that the exceptional
wines that are being produced in New
Jersey is absolutely because of the
grapes the people are caring for the
vines that translates into what you end
up tasing at um in your glass and what I
think you're getting at and I don't know
if bill has seen this as he has been
speaking with a lot of Winery owners
from anything um related to you know H
how um the flow of the visitor affects
you know how does it impact sales
there's lots of interesting stuff that
we talk about as an industry um
internally but we want to know from
people who have visited as it relates to
our growth is are they getting a great
experience because when the economy
starts to buckle and your disposable
income starts to decrease um you might
not be able to buy that ticket to go to
some of the international you know wine
destinations that we're familiar with um
but you can drive you can drive with
within one tank of gas we are in the
middle of about 44 million people that's
a huge audience that truly if if people
like you don't know about the Garden
State wine growers association or even
New Jersey wine we have a wild
opportunity every other
destination you got to like grab the
hook because I could talk about this for
a long time but every other wine
destination targets our resident they
want to
buy Billboards they want to be in our
magazines they want to have TV ads that
Target our ZIP codes our goo you know um
our Geo fencing everything is targeting
the uh one tank and gas um you know
resident I want for people to understand
that um we need to shop local and if you
truly fancy yourself as someone who
supports the local business person and
supports agriculture a bottle of wine is
a great way to show that and Bill
next to you or between you and Devon are
three glasses of wine and you have we've
we've I mean it's obviously wine from
here from Saddle Hill and we in our
previous episode one of our previous
episodes we actually tasted some wines
because you've made the point that New
Jersey wine is comparable to Napa Valley
really anywhere else and at the same
price price point you're going to get
the same quality of wine I personally
thought yours was better but it was
interesting on that episode we talked we
had two bottles and Apple wines and they
were $40 and our 22 Cabernet silon
$36.95 so here what I have our wine
maker got ready for us was from that
Barrel up there and this is the same
Cabernet s with
2023 really young so it's been sitting
in the barrels for um 14 months we have
at least two more months before that
gets blended into a bottle so it's
obviously pretty young but we should we
should actually try it and talk about it
and I want to know if you guys think
based on the fact that the two wines
that we tried from Napa there were 40
and this was
$36.95 since this is called wine
business and life and to me business is
the business of maybe making money or a
profit so you think I can get 40 bucks
for this now let's find out first I
already saw Deon take a little sip so
she could not resist to the view to the
viewers out there I um was getting for
clemp and I didn't have a chickpea you
know chck is neither a chck nor a about
the clanking I took you know what the
clanking is all about you know what this
we got to do it and we are supposed to
drink and then going to explain and then
you're going to explain I was in
Portugal uh this past summer and I went
to the world of wine museum and there's
this wall you know starting in the 1500s
on wine so back in the medieval days
enemies they poison each other right or
business competitors or whatever and the
wine glasses were filled up really high
so when they clanked wine would spill
over into each other's glass this way
they know they weren't being
poisoned did you see Princess Bride Bill
Prince of what Princess Bride we'll have
to it'll be homework for next time we'll
talk about that I'm thinking we should
fill our glasses more
then all right cheers guys cheers to New
Jersey wine
are we going to talk about swirling
and next episode Oh you mean that'll be
the Life
part look it's clearly like ridiculously
young but you could tell just by the
body of it and the fruit forwardness and
the color yeah and theor I mean that's
deep right I it's pretty we got Tyler's
lights over here this is wonderful even
see through it it's so deep I'm a big
fan and and so I want to go back to you
Deon PR we're talking to the executive
director of the Gardner St State wine
grows Association which is a really cool
title um obviously the gardan state is
what state for those who don't know New
Jersey so why aren't we the New Jersey
wine growers association when we exhibit
nationally and internationally even
locally a lot of people have a hard time
providing an unbiased sip um when they
taste our wine so thanks to the fact
that most people don't remember
the nickname of every state we um we
utilize the Garden State in order for
people um to taste with an unbias pallet
for the first SI and I do think that a
lot of people all over the country and
world picture you know the refineries in
wor that they pass on their Turnpike or
other things they don't picture us as
the garden estate period so that's why
that's why I as the question I think it
would maybe surprise a lot of people not
not from around here it's a great
question and you know I I um wanted to
touch on the avas if you're okay with
that for a moment so the state of New
Jersey is adorable like little
California California has over 150
American viticultural Appalachian or Ava
for short in New Jersey we have four so
up North is Central Delaware Valley AVA
that kind of straddles New Jersey and
Pennsylvania and then if you go a little
bit further north and across closer to
New York is Warren Hills Ava come down
south and you hit where we are which is
the outer coastal plane and then all the
way down south to the botom bottom tip
is the Kate May Peninsula
Ava and you we are ad Crystal Plains
well listen and you as a New Jersey wine
maker are you dealing with anybody you
know surprised a little prejudice
against New Jersey
surprised at the quality of the wine a
lot so you know I actually sto in to
Saddle Hill every once in a while but I
live in Florida and I brought a lot of
sat Hol wine to Florida and I have some
wine snob friends that are just saying
the heck you doing up there I said well
you know I want to be a little modest so
our soil has 100 Years of Horseman or in
it right so that's why our wine is so
good but reality is to devan's point
earlier we've come a long way right you
know New Jersey was known for the wine
of being fruit wines blueberry wine
cranberry wine well we're now making
real deal wine and it's you know it's
just super exciting and the outer
coastal plains is um our region and
there's an Association outer coastal
plains run by some really great folks
and they came up with years ago a wine
that if you're in the outer coastal
plains you can make a wine called cord
CEST and Cordes is heart of the East is
that French it is and you are correct
right and it's right and super excited
our wine maker Peter is on the board of
at Crystal Plains so he takes this wine
really seriously
and we won a silver
medal uh for our first year out making
gordes wine which is outstanding because
the wineries that are in the outer
coastal plain that are producing Cordes
also receive a wild amount of attention
and they deserve it from journalists so
if you want to experience other wine
that is destination specific a region
specific you're familiar with champagne
with a Capital C um Bordeaux with a
capital B
um a lot of those origin stories are as
critical as superhero origin stories so
Cordes gave us a chance to say to the
world that the outer coast of plain
grapes are desired not just because we
are New Jersey wineries but others are
now taking note because this harvest in
2024 by all accounts we are the silver
lining of the drought that New Jersey
just experienced because the climate was
very similar to California um and we've
heard reports from the Bordeaux region
that they may have a challenging harvest
in 24 so we think that um demand for our
wines will be quite High just speaking
with you and listening to you and um I
personally believe that New Jersey wine
grows Association is in excellent hands
and could not have a more passionate
knowledgeable and driven person at the
helm so how what was your background
both business and person that led you to
this
position when I was um graduating from
business school I was able to meet with
the CEO of the Philadelphia chapter of
the American Red Cross um I was the
founder of drexal women in business only
because they thought Devon was a boy
name and so they put me in a lot of
groups with a lot of women um and we
finished our work quite quickly and
therefore we had some extra time so we
created that group and we joined the
American Red crosses I believe it was
their first now annual 5K to raise funds
for the local chapter
I raised my hand in the middle of the
you know um I guess team rally that took
place in Center City Philadelphia and I
asked about how the organization um in
Philadelphia kept the transaction cost
so low I think for anyone who supports a
nonprofit we're very dialed into to that
so um what percentage of the dollars
used for admin and they were below two2
two cents per dollar which I thought was
outstanding so he thought it was
outstanding that I knew what a
transaction was and he hired me right
out of business school to be the
electronic marketing manager at the Red
Cross um and I I love him and I hope
he's not upset that I'm going to be
sharing this he said I'm not quite sure
what the electronic marketing manager is
but can you figure it out and can you
build a program I was very happy to do
so this was early 2000s um a few months
later heran Katrina hit and after that
um Tom Foley got a phone call from me
not not at 6:30 in the morning but at
11:00 p.m. at night 48 hours after
Katrina and it was me asking him if I
could call Google and he was like are
you okay you know did you have too much
wine today what's going on um we had a
lot of missing people and we needed to
search where they were and as family
members um you your phone lines were
down it was a challenge so he gave me
permission to do something outside of my
role he genuinely he believed in me but
he was sort of like good luck trying to
reach Google so we created a strategic
partnership between the national
American Red Cross Google and Comcast so
it was called Katrina search and now
it's called people search so God forbid
a million times any of us are missing
someone and they check in it at a
shelter and the Red Cross is phenomenal
at disaster relief and taking care of
people but search is a unique specialty
that Google has so now it exists where
you can find someone a little bit easier
so I kind of credit whatever um my I
learned from my family 100% but also
having leaders like Bill that believe
that you know hey kid just give it a
shot right I have these ideas I share
them with him first um I get the
blessing and then We're Off to the Races
so some of the ideas work um and we have
full industry support other ideas we
have to beta test and make sure that it
works because we're all mom and pop
businesses and Frank
you know someone like Bill understands
more um uh near and dear to the heart
you and your wife are so dedicated to
the high quality experience that
somebody gets when they walk in the door
but it's not simple it's just the end
result this radical Hospitality ends up
seeming simple because the staff the
ownership the wine makers The Growers
everyone is so passionate about what
they do so it makes my job a lot easier
to promote what they're doing you know
your Katrina story blows me away I that
was 2005 for those who don't know what
it was or remember and it really
devastated the New Orleans region and
that that whole and U I'm just picturing
I I was riveted to it watching them try
to search and find everybody for you to
have been involved in that stuff and
that's inspirational and to you for that
I actually I actually have it I know
we're kind of toward toward the end of
this but um you know we know you or I
know you as this uh you know highly
energetic
um single
mom uh we talk a lot about business we
don't talk a lot about
life and tell me more about Devin Perry
and life and try not to say the word
wine absolutely so uh other than the
fact you live in Cher
M so I'll I'll start with a tiny story
about my mother so my mom is a single
mom right so so she raised me um my dad
is a wonderful businessman um they both
come from um incredibly hardworking
Families my mom's dad was a marine um
and then he made window coverings um
Bleaker blinds in Philadelphia and that
was on Seventh in green and my dad's dad
was um he was the founder of the Frank
linman and QVC and so all of those
dinner tables involved um talking about
business
life happened while we talked about
business so I could sit on my popups
laps um I had at one point six living
grandmothers and um they were everything
they were funny as anything six living
grandmothers because of divorces and
remarriages I know everyone's trying to
figure out how that happened um and so
my bubby used to say you should always
wear lipstick and earrings cuz you never
know when a talent scout is around um
she made friends when she filled her
prescriptions at local pharmacies you
know I became the woman that I am
because of the friendliness um and
dedication I think of my grandparents
and my parents so Thanksgiving dinner
when you were younger and we're kind of
getting involved in
business I can only speak for myself you
know I started my business my father was
my initial partner there was some turkey
legs flying across that table every once
in a while can you speak to uh how the
family got along family business is just
brutally difficult it's interesting so
my my grandfather for anyone who um on
my on my dad's side his name was Joseph
seagull who anyone for anyone who was
able to work with him um and at his
memorial which happened in um December
of 2019 actually January 31st of 2019 I
believe it was um they spoke so highly
of his the the way that he was grounded
he was logical and there was Excellence
or you just didn't do it so there was
nothing to argue about you either did it
you did it well or you didn't do it at
all so basically he was a dictator I
guess so and and and if you knew what
you were talking about he also listened
but when he believed in some something
for example he launched um shipping and
handling to be disclosed to the consumer
prior to the purchase doesn't sound like
a very big deal but if you're buying
something that's very heavy or traveling
quite a distance and you purchase it and
then shipping and handling is equal to
the amount of that purchase that is an
questionable business practice my
understanding is that somebody actually
walked out um when he made the decision
to to be dedicated to that transparency
because they thought it was a bad
business decision and here it was part
of his legacy people talked about it at
his memorial so I think it's he he was a
Fearless consensus Builder and he
challenged alled you to say here's why
maybe that wouldn't work and he would
listen but if you didn't have sound
evidence to back it up you were doing it
but he had to be pretty proud of Devin
he must have bragged about you like
crazy he he was very you know he was um
I'm very happy to share that he brought
me to lots of failing
Ventures but I learned so much and he
was always proud of me that I was
willing to you know sit next to him and
do the work Devin we talk about a lot of
different things on this and when we
talk about wine business and life and
we're intertwining all of those but one
of the things that bill as a as a
leading entrepreneur and the bestselling
author of it it talks about is failures
and and that you learn more from the
failure and you have to overcome the
failure so I'm sure you learned a lot
from that too it's important I think um
we all know what it looks like to make
money right that is not something that
anybody needs to say okay so you're
making money what are you going to do
with it how are you going to reinvest
the capital into expansion I'm sure that
there are smart ways to use other
people's money I know I've heard a lot
of people talk about that but you don't
even get a bank to consider working with
you unless you can demonstrate some type
of history or or track record of
experience you don't get that by
succeeding every time you get that by
failing and being
absolutely Relentless in figuring out
why you failed my my family story is
full of business failures um they
include the first five star smokefree
European hotel that nobody wanted to go
to so we had a lot of Post-it
notes yeah but it was a really good
lesson in launch when The Sweet Spot is
presenting itself to you if you launch a
little prematurely you're going to have
a lot of extra Post-it notes and Devin
in your role with the New Jersey I'm
sorry the Garden State and I really
apologize this everybody but but in if
anybody wants to go check out your
website and see see you you you do so
much fun stuff and visiting the winery
alone is great but there's all sorts of
activities you have surrounding them too
we have so many events all over the
state all the time and New Jersey
wines.com that's New Jersey all spelled
out wines plural because how can you
have just one.com um we aggregate all of
the events at every Winery all over the
state and we help you take the thinking
out of what you're going to do whether
it's right now or this weekend ahead um
the Garden State wine growers
association also recently coined
November as New Jersey wine month so
it's a milestone because it's the first
time in history the government even
proclaimed it with a beautiful frame
document so you know whatever happens to
me tomorrow it's still going to exist
next year and our hope is that the
farmers and the wine makers and The
Growers and um people that are out there
wondering how they can participate in
events going with their friends or
family members just go to New Jersey
wines.com or follow us everywhere you
could follow anything on social media
and I got to believe Bill it brings all
of you together all the other wine
Growers and almost you know as a as a
Brotherhood Sisterhood and camarad it's
unbelievable I've met some really great
friends I mean obviously including Devin
but it's unbelievable like a whole new
what you call a Brotherhood I mean I can
call Scott at alurn Road and what are
you doing here and it it's just terrific
it really is and it's really not
competitive I presume
maybe it
is you know I mean look we all want to
sell our wine and at the end of the day
we're all trying to get into you know
we're trying to get our wines into the
same liquor store and the liquor store
says well I already have 25 different
New Jersey wines I don't need another
one so there's a competitive nature to
it but really what's good for one is
going to be good for everybody and Deon
obviously that's your role 100% I was
just going to say you took the words
right out of my mouth the Garden State
wine Growers is the place where in any
area where there is true competition
which is necessary for progress and
growth and success and betterment of
product um we take that really off the
table and our our thrust is we all
belong on the table so we are fearless
promoters of all New Jersey wineries
getting together finding out if the
weather is a little bit of a wild card
um hey what what is it that you're doing
um now that there's this heat wave
coming in um there are creative MacGyver
techniques that wineries use all Over
the Garden State um and so sometimes it
does take um I don't know if I'm am I
allowed to say crib notes how do I talk
about that without saying it I'm sure
there's a better
way I don't know how anyway so they'll
share crib notes and and tell each other
okay you're having this challenge
they'll taste each other's wines they'll
talk about marketing you know everything
that you're allowed to talk to a
competitor about um they do and they
help each other improve and Bill from my
standpoint it's obviously good for all
of you to raise the awareness of New
Jersey wines and to have someone at you
leading the charge thank you I'm
thrilled to be here we we're just
getting warmed up because
our well he brand new to this so so I
mean with that passion the drive and the
growth of maybe about 10% recently we
will have a larger growth because you
you look at Napa how many wineries any
idea how many there are out there well I
can simply just share again the Ava
statistic which is that we have four
avas in adorable beautifully situated
New Jersey with 136 miles a beach and
California has over 150 avas and God
knows how many Beach how many miles a
beach and we're much easier to get
around so the the way that I look at our
continued growth has to be a clustered
approach Partnerships between Wineries
and making sure the public has an
outstanding memorable time with our
radical
Hospitality I think that says it all and
I can see why all of the wine growers in
in New Jersey want her as her executive
director because it has really been a
pleasure thank you so much for joining
us thank you for having me and Bill this
is really really good even it's really
what do you think Devin I will say that
I haven't had a New Jersey wine that I
haven't liked ah there you go and that
is why Devon executive director of the
Garden State wine growers association is
so good at a role amongst other reasons
thank you so much for joining us and I
can see that we are in good hands the
New Jersey wine makers thank you for
having me can we do a cheers to New
Jersey wine together on a count of three
1 2 3 cheers to New Jersey wine