Wild Way closing: Coffee camper drips bittersweet blend of emotions as owner’s cup runs dry
June 21, 2024 | Nikki Overfelt Chifalu
Nearly six years after she began serving lattes in her popular Wild Way coffee camper, Christine Clutton is saying goodbye to the business at the end of the month, she confirmed.
Wild Way Coffee — featured on the Peacock series “The Simple Art of Swedish Death Cleaning” and approved by KC-raised actor Jason Sudeikis — is set to close June 30.
“It’s bittersweet, for sure,” Clutton said. “But we’re ready for something different.”
The decision to move on is personal, not a financial, she shared. Clutton started Wild Way with her husband, Jon, in 2018. But when he had to take on a smaller role because of an autoimmune disease in 2022, Clutton began contemplating the future of the coffee camper with a new filter.
“We built it together,” she explained. “Part of the fun was doing it together. The goal was to eventually have him come on full time, so it just changed the dynamics of how we wanted it to be set up.”
From the archives: Wild Way coffee rolling Austin flavor onto Kansas City’s bean scene
Clutton ultimately took some time off, trying to determine how to best reorganize the business to make it more manageable.
“Much like invisible labor in households, there’s also a lot of invisible labor in the small business world,” she noted. “It is really tricky to communicate how much energy and time goes into these thought processes and roles that we take on as owners.”
“I’m not alone in any way,” Clutton added. “But it just comes down to, it’s still that hard — even with a great team, even with a great partner, even with incredible customers who are supportive.”
When her plans for 2024 spiraled out of her control and event her body started to feel the stress, Clutton said, she recognized it was time for a change.
“I knew that (my team and customers) would be there to support me regardless of what the answer was,” she explained.
View this post on Instagram
Clutton isn’t sure what’s next in her journey — maybe a return to marketing or writing a book about what she has learned as an entrepreneur, but definitely not starting another business soon — but she’s spending her time soaking up her last few weekends with the team members and customers who have become like family.
“I have loved building a team and just mentoring incredible people,” she noted. “A lot of my team has been women over the course of the last six years, and I’ve just had the most amazing time getting to know them and getting to see these young, fierce women grow into themselves.”
Click here to follow Wild Way as it winds down operations.
Clutton feels like she hit the jackpot with customers through the years, she added.
“They are the most incredible people,” Clutton said. “Even the way that they’ve shown up for me after announcing the closing; it’s just been an outpouring of love and support and excitement for me. And sure, there’s sadness and emotion, but there’s way more encouragement and support than anything else. I’ll miss them. I’ll miss being a part of their everyday life.”
“Some of my customers, I’ve known for their entire life,” she added. “One customer started coming to me when they were still in the womb. They don’t know life without Wild Way. Their little 6-year-old heart has never not got to have a pancake drink on a Saturday.”
Wild Way’s customers have even included celebrity Sudeikis, Clutton shared, who visited the camper before an event at Union Station and ordered an americano with cream.
“He was super chill, really easy to chat with,” she recalled. “Then he went into an immediate recording — I think it was broadcasted for radio — he specifically was like, ‘I’m drinking a coffee right now. It’s really good coffee.’ And he didn’t mention Wild Way, but just the fact that he really enjoyed his coffee enough to say something.”
As for the future of Wild Way itself, Clutton said she is open to selling the business or assets — like the camper. She encouraged anyone to reach out if they are interested.
“We are hoping to pass off Wild Way to some to somebody else,” she added. “So hopefully this isn’t the end of Wild Way.”

2024 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Mid-America Angels invested $3.6M in record-breaking 2016
For the second consecutive year, the Mid-America Angel Network posted a record-breaking year of investing. In 2016, the Kansas City-based network invested $3.6 million via 15 deals in startups, topping its 2015 totals of $2.8 million in nine investments. “What you see here is the result of several years of work, not just one,“ MAA…
Digital Sandbox’s newest cohort: Hip hop health startup, moving app
Digital Sandbox KC on Friday announced its support of two new Kansas City tech firms. Led by entrepreneur Jeff Shackelford, the Kansas City-based incubator welcomed H3TV and MovinHouz to its program. Digital Sandbox invests up to $25,000 in area businesses for specific projects that help the firms secure additional funding. The organization has now supported…
Pipeline announces award finalists, judges for the Innovators
The Kansas City-based Pipeline Entrepreneurial Fellowship announced Friday the award finalists and national judging panel for its annual awards, the Innovators. Formerly known as Innovator of the Year, Pipeline’s culminating event is set for Jan. 26, during which 13 fellows from the region will pitch their firms to the judges. Later in the day, the…
Tech firm LendingStandard raises $600K, lands big client
Kansas City-based tech firm LendingStandard announced Thursday that it’s closed on an angel capital round of $600,000. CEO Andy Kallenbach said he’s pleased with the direction of the startup, which created software for multi-family lender organizations. Kallenbach added that he’s excited by what opportunities the financing affords LendingStandard. “This investment will allow us to develop new…


