Our staff includes many dance callers, dance instructors, and musicians. We also have a storyteller, a preschool teacher, a stilts or ropes course instructor, and an arts and crafts instructor along with a few other unique talents each year. The types of dance offered often include contra, English country, Irish, morris, longsword and rapper sword dance.
Bios for management staff can be found on the contact page.
-
Andy Wilson
stilting, family dance

Andy Wilson is a long time Family Week camper and has had many roles over the years. His current role is teaching campers to stilt in the afternoons on the meadow. Through his encouraging and practical approach he is able to get people of all ages and sizes successfully walking tall. He also calls some of our family dances, drawing on his long history as a barn dance caller. In his other life he works for the state park system and is a sound technician for dances and events.
-
Anne Bingham Goess
fiddle

Anne Bingham Goess enjoys wearing many hats (and wreaths). Trained as a classical violinist, she immersed herself in choral singing and light opera for many years, and then fell in love with Irish fiddle at Lark Camp. These days she plays regularly for Irish, English country, contra, and family dances in the Bay Area, and wields the violin and viola with the band Erica & Friends. She has also performed since 2010 with the Midwinter Revels, including the 2024 Celtic Celebration of the Solstice.
-
Bessie Zolno
stage fighting

Bio coming soon.
-
Bryce Carlberg
rapper, Irish sets, longsword

This generation of Carlbergs, Dana and Bryce, began dancing as children in California and currently reside in Berea, Kentucky. Over the past 25 years they have honed their skills in morris and rapper sword and about a decade ago started teaching. Their experience includes performing on various teams worldwide and participating in and judging DART (Dance America Rapper Tournament). Although this marks their first year as staff at BACDS, they attended our Family Week as kids and have a longstanding history of attending other dance camps; they look forward to carrying on these traditions and learning new ones.
-
Courtney Tolhurst
preschool

Courtney Tolhurst worked as a kindergarten assistant at Sierra Waldorf School in Jamestown, California, for two years. She will be graduating from Cal Poly Humboldt with a bachelor’s degree in Elementary Education in May and will be obtaining a teaching credential next year. Courtney loves to dance, sing, crochet, create endless art projects, and spend as much time as possible in nature. This will be her 5th BACDS Family Week, and she couldn’t be more excited to spend another fantastic week in the preschool.
-
Craig Johnson
piano, accordion

Craig Johnson has been to almost every Family Week, and has also played piano and accordion for dancers since 1982. He plays for vintage and Celtic dance at SF’s Dickens Fair, performs with the Dogwatch Nautical Band, and is a regular musician for San Francisco’s Cotswold team, Goat Hill Morris. He is also a long-time director of BACDS, the programmer for the Second Saturday SF English series, and was one of the folks who helped revive the SF Contra in August 2024.
-
Dana Carlberg
rapper, Irish sets, longsword

This generation of Carlbergs, Dana and Bryce, began dancing as children in California and currently reside in Berea, Kentucky. Over the past 25 years they have honed their skills in morris and rapper sword and about a decade ago started teaching. Their experience includes performing on various teams worldwide and participating in and judging DART (Dance America Rapper Tournament). Although this marks their first year as staff at BACDS, they attended our Family Week as kids and have a longstanding history of attending other dance camps; they look forward to carrying on these traditions and learning new ones.
-
David James
mandolin, fiddle, guitar

David James has spent many decades as a folk dance musician in Southern California, accompanying English country dance, contra dance, rapper sword dance, and Cotswold and Border morris dance. A recent retiree after a 25 year career as an elementary school music teacher, he’s spent time in symphony orchestras, pop/rock bands, and western swing bands. He’s proud and delighted to have been part of the Family Week staff since 2009, and excited to be here again to see old friends and make new ones.
-
Doe Taryn
contra

Doe Taryn is an up and coming caller from Oakland who’s excited to return for her second summer at BACDS family camp. She brings a convivial energy with just the right amount of wit to the mic. Doe’s warm and encouraging style inspires confidence in new dancers, and empowers more experienced folks to be creative. Between their workshops, you’ll likely find them sitting in on sing-a-longs or noodling on a banjo under the redwoods.
-
Iridaea Bolger
MC

Iridaea MacAi-Bolger is a displaced Celt and sings and plays guitar with the folk-Irish-thrashgrass band Stone Crowe. He leads seasonal public rituals as a Vision Tender for the Santa Cruz multi-faith multi-cultural group the Temple of the Waters and is a co-founder of the immigrant-allied group Your Allied Rapid Response in Santa Cruz. He’s also a father, a stepfather, a husband, a poor surfer, a mediocre herbalist, and a well-intentioned goofball. Ask him what he thinks about connecting with your ancestors sometime when you’re not in a hurry…
-
Jeff Spero
piano

Jeffrey Spero has been playing piano and singing since he was five years old. At a young age he discovered an affinity for popular music and developed his style emulating musicians like James Taylor, Elton John, and Bruce Hornsby. In his 30s, he brought his rhythmic style to American and Celtic folk and dance music and now travels around the country playing dances, concerts, and festivals with bands such as Syncopaths and Rhythm Raptors. In addition to editing and music, Jeffrey is a contra dance caller and choreographer whose dances have been enjoyed all across this country and overseas.
-
Lindsay Verbil
English country dance

Lindsay Verbil is a caller whose warmth, enthusiasm, and clarity empower dancers to feel capable, confident, and connected to the music and to each other. Her teaching style is focused and precise, while her good humor and sense of fun create a welcoming and joyful space. A dancer herself, as well as a musician, organizer, and co-host of the web series “5 Things,” Lindsay brings together a tangible love for all facets of the dance experience.
-
M’Gilvry Allen
fiddle, electronic music

M’Gilvry Allen is a fiddler, producer, and teacher who has been coming to Family Week since before he was born. He’s studied fiddle for 25 years in Scottish, Irish, Old Time, and Scandinavian traditions, and has toured nationally and in Europe with several folk projects including Maya Elise & The Good Dream, and Singing The Bones. When not at camp, M’Gilvry lives in Southern Oregon, where he produces records, teaches fiddle and music production, and writes songs & tunes for the next generation. Find him at mgilvryallen.com.
-
Nick Cuccia
sound engineer

Nick Cuccia has provided dancer- and musician-friendly sound at numerous events throughout Northern California during the past twenty-five years, including BACDS Family Week, English Week, Fall Frolick, and Playford balls and camps; NBCDS Mad Robin Balls, SCDS Echo Summit weekend, RSCDS-SF Valentines’ Ball and Asilomar Scottish Country Dance Weekend & Workshop, San Francisco Queer Contra Dance Camp, and two CDSS Lifetime Contribution Award celebrations. An avid contra, traditional and club square, English country, and international folk dancer and former morris dancer, Nick also calls contras, squares, and English country dances throughout Central and Northern California and Nevada. Nick lives in Merced, California, with his wife Andrea and their two cats and two dogs.
-
Rhonda Cayford
rapper, morris

Rhonda Cayford has been an avid contra dancer for over 40 years, starting in Boston in 1978 and having the good fortune to move to San Francisco in 1980, just as the dance scene was taking off here. She discovered rapper at BACDS English Week in 1986 and it has been her passion ever since. She is the founder of a womens’ rapper team called Twisted Sisters, and was a long-time member of Swords of Gridlock. She has taught rapper, longsword, Cotswold, and Northwest morris at camp.
-
Scott Ferreter
guitar, songwriting

Scott Elliott Ferreter, known for his duo The Feelings Parade and as a member of beloved Northern California band MaMuse, has a history of laying it all on the line. His devotion to music has him comfortable wearing many hats (songwriter, producer, multi-instrumentalist), although he is most at home behind the mic. His songs take on topics of ambitious depth—impermanence, healing, death, and ancestry—yet his humor and realness bring it all together with gentleness and easeful reverence. While Scott has played enormous stages like the Masonic and the Fox Theater in Oakland, he maintains an authenticity rooted in a history of playing state prisons and busking on the street. He brings a rare presence to any stage.
-
Talitha Amadea Aho
singing, morris

Talitha Amadea Aho is returning for a third year, teaching singing for all ages and morris dancing for kids. She has been morris dancing for a quarter century—first on Ring O’ Bells Morris and now on Berkeley Morris. Her singing class this year will center on call-and-response sea chanteys that everyone can sing. She loves nothing more than helping someone build confidence as they learn a new song or dance.
-
Tom Phillips
fiddle

Tom Phillips has been playing his fiddle for English and American country dancing in New York since the 1970’s. He recorded two albums of contra dance music with The Fish Family, a band named in 1986 by his three-year-old daughter Talitha, with whom he has been dancing and singing since she was in utero at Pinewoods Camp. Nowadays Tom can be found playing Irish tunes in pubs, with his bodhran-beating wife Debra Given.
-
Tristan Cole-Falek
crafts

Tristan Cole-Falek is a musician, luthier, and craftsperson known for making sawdust by day and music by night. Although he’s been around the world with his stand-up bass, most days you can find him at his home shop on the Gaviota Coast, where his passion for form and function finds expression in a myriad of figured timbers. His close relationship with the material and thoughtful approach to craft create space for a deeper understanding of the making and what it is to be a “maker.”
