Gut Decisions
Today ends a miserable week of weather. Rain, fog, mist, and clouds have stalled ripening and contributed to some rot. To what degree I do not know because I have stayed out of the vineyard.
Read MoreToday ends a miserable week of weather. Rain, fog, mist, and clouds have stalled ripening and contributed to some rot. To what degree I do not know because I have stayed out of the vineyard.
Read MoreWe are ready for harvest. The August bottling has emptied barrels and tanks, crush equipment is running smoothly, and trucks, tractors and trailers operational. But the grapes are not ready.
Read MoreVintage 2020 is beginning to come into focus. Yesterday berry samples were taken, lab analysis run, and juice tasted. White grapes are first to ripen, so they command our full attention at this stage. The only definitive conclusion we can surmise is that 2020 will be a very late harvest.
Read MoreThe vineyard is starting to dry out after a soggy start of the month. A new flush of growth has sent us back into the vines to hedge, mow and weed. Fortunately it looks like harvest will be at least a week late, possibly starting the week of September 7. This will give us more time to get all our crush and fermentation equipment cleaned and prepared.
Read MoreConditions have reversed course from very dry to very wet. This is not what we want, but it is what we have.
Read MoreIn the 1980s it was referred to as global warming. This didn’t really seem all that bad considering that our recent winters had been “bud killing” cold and Cabernet Sauvignon struggled to ripen in the chill of late October. Unfortunately we were to discover that global warming was more than just an increase in temperature. In fact all the other consequences of climate change have given us the greatest problems.
Read MoreWinegrowers prefer a dry July. New shoot growth slows just at the right time. The vines can then turn their attention to ripening the grapes rather than producing additional unnecessary leaves. But it can be too dry. And it has been too dry lately.
Read MoreIt has been exactly ten years (vintage 2010) since we’ve experienced such a dry mid-July. While anything could and probably will happen over the next several months, the vines are in position to produce some exceptional wines.
Read MoreMemorial Day through the Fourth of July is our busiest stretch in the vineyard. Shoot positioning, leaf and lateral removal, top hedging, young vine de-fruiting, weeding, mowing and spraying all need to be accomplished with precise timing.
Read MoreI wish we could flatten the curve of what is about to happen in the vineyard. A very cold April and last week’s freeze put the brakes on vineyard work.
Read MoreA word with a relative meaning given events over the past few months. The temperature was 29°F at dawn, which is borderline.
Read MoreObsession is checking multiple weather sources every few hours, getting the same outcome, and knowing that it won’t change a thing anyway. One degree could be the difference between a full harvest and a fraction of a harvest.
Read MoreReplanting is done. Every winter vines are ordered from commercial nurseries to fill in for missing vines in the vineyard.
Read MoreThe making of Avenius Chardonnay is a case study of experience and trust.
Read MoreChardonnay was planted in 1996 in two separate blocks totaling one acre.
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