Time to Dry out
The vines are looking good. Too good. There is a saying that struggling vines make the best wine. Let’s hope that’s not entirely true. This year the vines are exuberant, lush, green, and happy.
Read MoreThe vines are looking good. Too good. There is a saying that struggling vines make the best wine. Let’s hope that’s not entirely true. This year the vines are exuberant, lush, green, and happy.
Read MoreWe are often asked about how we are adapting to a new climate. There are still too many unknowns for us to come up with a comprehensive plan, but some pieces are starting to fall into place.
Read MoreElegance with structure. Youthful and harmonious. Refreshing and complex.
Read MoreSummer thunderstorms have continually refreshed ground moisture this growing season. The vines, the cover crops, and the grass retain a spring-like green lushness.
Read MoreSo far this summer’s weather has been pretty normal. We’ve avoided any damaging storms, but still have had a modest amount of rainfall. Temperatures have been average to slightly below average. All this makes the vines happy. They demonstrate their bliss by way of exuberant shoot growth along with large and copious clusters.
Well-timed rains and lots of sun have brought abundance to the vineyard. The vines require extra hedging and trimming as shoot growth is exuberant. Cluster size is much larger than typical due to good weather conditions during flowering and pollination. The potential crop is large. Too large. These yields would produce thin, uninteresting wines as the vines would struggle to sufficiently ripen the grapes.
Read MoreThe pace in the vineyard has not slowed, but we are slowly transitioning from the basics to fine tuning. Basics refers to the more mundane tasks of tying up shoots and hedging excessively long shoots. A rainy spring has stimulated vine growth, so we will be occupied with these jobs for the foreseeable future.
Read MoreVintage 2022 is starting to take shape. Two aspects stand out: a potentially abundant crop and vigorous vine growth.
Read MoreSo here we are in late May and it has been raining a lot. What does this mean for the vines and for the vintage.
Read MoreThis week begins the start of seasonal “green work.” This refers to all the tasks of pulling, plucking, tying, positioning, and hedging the newly emerging (green) growth of the vines. This vineyard work is detailed, complex, often tedious, and difficult to describe.
Read MoreNot that cold last night, only in the high 30’s. We are feeling good and ready to start the season on a good footing.
Read MoreLast night we had a freeze. But it was not freezing enough to do damage to the vines (we think).
Read MoreVulnerable.
Once again. Most of our vines have budded out and are now freeze susceptible.
Read MoreAfter dire warnings of a bud killing freeze, the only thing we lost was sleep.
Read MoreIt’s complicated. Some vines have budded out. Snow is not a problem. But temperatures below 30°F are a problem.
Read More