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Weather Today
We've had relatively dry weather for a couple days, and the next couple should be equivalent--no warmth, cold nights (43-45F), a little sunshine and lots of overcast, fog and mist. With most of the maturation generated by hangtime rather than photosynthetic activity--i.e., no sun--we are beginning to pull in acceptably ripe fruit based on dry windows for picking and potential for deterioration. We are helped by heretofore cold temperatures inhibiting onset of botrytis, but they should begin building as the week progresses. Only one significant rain event (0.5 inch) is forecast over the next week, likely Tuesday afternoon, so we should have all fruit in besides Riesling by weekend.
Harvest to-date
Total:
181 tons
(49% of forecast)
Pinot Noir: 109 tons
(64% of forecast)
Pinot Gris: 30 tons
(50% of forecast)
Chardonnay: 42 tons
(37% of forecast)
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October
6,
2007
| Click
images to enlarge |
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| At
Dawn ... Ridgecrest 5 Acre Block, the oldest we have,
in its 23rd Harvest. |
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| Picking
the 5 Acre Block at Ridgecrest, looking north. |
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| Beginning to pick Ridgecrest, the Babies Block looking south into fog shrouded Chehalem Valley. |
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| Wind Ridge Vineyard after harvest, looking south. |
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| New 7000 gal tank delivered on Friday for INOX production (round peg in square hole) |
Long Days, Full Fermentors, and Beginning to Pick Ridgecrest
We expected a later Harvest this year, but Mother Nature
gave us moisture rather than sun to dictate picking times. We
anticipate blessedly lower sugars and alcohols by less
heat driving things, with flavor development being the
key to a good versus great vintage. So far, so good.
With flavors and physiological development advancing
at our highest elevation and oldest vineyard, Ridgecrest,
we began harvest there on Friday, trying to avoid botrytis
on very important, high-quality vineyard blocks. At
this stage we feel like dance choreographers more than
technical winemakers, since we're having to push earlier
ferments to completion to open up tanks for reuse by the
Ridgecrest fruit. The dance seems to be working, the music
good and the partner sweet and interesting.
A variety of sites shows its worth in years like this,
whether you're looking for fully mature fruit from warmer
sites, sound and austere fruit from higher elevations,
or a range of flavors from different soils. In order
to experiment with fulfilling demand for INOX, our stainless
steel tank fermented Dijon Chardonnay, we have contracted
for extra fruit from good sites in the valley (our only
exception to being Estate Bottled). This almost automatically
gives us a bracketing of flavors, acid levels, and ripeness.
How these are selected, chosen for harvest timing, and blended
is the winemaker's art, but the constituent fruit is all
grower and Mother Nature. We foresee complexity and
great interest in 2007 INOX.
Our Harvest Interns are an especially strong class in
2007:
- Dom Maxwell, the Winemaker at Greystone winery in
Waipara, New Zealand, brings not just practical and
detailed experience, but a great, positive attitude.
He also by himself raises the average height of all
of us by a couple inches.
-
Gilli Lipscombe, bright
and hard-working, also from down-under in Australia's
Margaret River area, who, along with her husband Paul
who is helping at Beaux Freres this Harvest, aspires
to planting grapes and making wine possibly in Tasmania.
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| Kristen
and Daniel, taking leave from front room marketing
work, at the sorting conveyor. |
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| Brian
and Ksenija weighing Chardonnay fruit. |
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| Michael
Newsome at the press. |
Kristen Zeiger, a smart, sassy recent graduate in
Biology from U of North Carolina, who comes to us from
the retail wine shop side of the business and is also
recently engaged to a Southerner-turned-Brit. Kristen
came in early and helped in racking and bottling prior
to harvest, rooming with Priscilla and seemingly becoming
the daughter Priscilla never had.
- Kristine Hodsdon heads up our harvest laboratory work, having spent
valuable time after graduating from UC-Davis in Biology,
traveling to wine jobs in Napa, New Zealand, Spain
and most recently McLaren Vale, Australia. Energetic,
always smiling, she epitomizes the sharp, but laid
back approach of the next generation of world-savvy
winemakers.
- Ksenija Kostic is a Molecular Biologist
just graduated and most recently working in citrus
research laboratory work in Florida, where she lives
with her husband, who is the marketing rep for our
FL distributor in Orlando. Intrigued by the possibility
of growing grapes and making wine in her native Serbia,
from which she immigrated seven years ago, she is like
a sponge and, like the rest of the crew, works very
hard with a positive, inquisitive spirit.
- Michael
Newsome has knowledge about everything from wine to
music to mechanical teardowns to cooking, i.e., is
a renaissance/handyman cross, which is what you'd expect
from a Fine Arts major who's last job was as Wine Director
at George's at the Cove in La Jolla, California. He's
relocated to Oregon and is bowed and scraped to by
those staying at the Chehalem House as the provider
of gourmet cuisine and good humor.
With a crew like this, this can't help but be a great
vintage.
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| Stoller
Vineyards from below, with ominous clouds above. |
Regards,
Harry
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