Later he founded the Champlain Valley Festival – a cherished summer folk event that’s probably best known for introducing Quèbecois music and dance to an appreciative Vermont public.
Sustic ran the Festival for 10 years, while also running early education programs in Franklin County and being honored for his work in education. At the same time, he also built a part-time career as a performer and dance caller.
But in 1999 his son Tom, 14, was diagnosed with leukemia. In the subsequent two years that Tom lived, musicians rallied to play benefits for a bone marrow transplant that, sadly, never took place.
"When Tom died, we were left with a chunk of money,” Sustic says. He and his wife, Deborah Travis, decided to continue the concerts and sep up a fund to support families facing similar medical ordeals.
The musicians at his monthly Events for Tom series are now paid, but part of the proceeds goes to the fund. Sustic also regularly appears with his instruments and friends on the pediatric floor at Fletcher Allen Hospital where his family endured some of its worst moments – not an easy place to return to, but a rewarding one, he says.
In 2003, after years of being asked to teach violin, Sustic started the Fiddleheads, a group of fiddlers aged 8 to 19. Under his tutelage they learn traditional music and perform at festivals, weddings and fairs. He doesn’t get upset if anyone misses a rehearsal. “Music doesn’t have to be the only thing in your life, or even the main thing, to make you happy,” he says. |