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Weather Today
Significant rain — 3.4 inches
Wednesday thru Saturday — are now being followed by a promised
4-5 days of dry and warmer temperatures. This bodes well for the
botrytis affected Riesling we have hanging in three blocks. We may
for the first time in several years be able to sort a Late Harvest
portion from the Dry Riesling fruit. Harvesting late week is likely,
finishing our 2007 Harvest in the vineyard.
Harvest to-date
Total:
329 tons
(89% of forecast)
Pinot Noir: 156 tons
(92% of forecast)
Pinot Gris: 54.4 tons
(91% of forecast)
Chardonnay: 105 tons
(91% of forecast)
Riesling: 2 tons
(10% of forecast)
Gamay noir: 3 tons
(52% of forecast)
Pinot blanc: 9 tons
(170% of forecast)
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| Mike a seeming sleepwalker, long days grinding
to a halt. |
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| Dom dumping Pinot from fermentor into press. |
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October
21,
2007
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images to enlarge |
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Mike and Brian discussing
barrel strategies. |
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Gilli exults in filling barrels
in sun, not bone-chilling wet. |
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| Kristine and Dom refuel prior to digging tanks. |
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| Kristine digging out one of last two 8 ton Pinot fermentors. |
When We Suddenly Go from Insanity and Chaos to Calm and Centered
There is a point in every vintage where you think you
can't do anymore, spend anymore time in the winery, cope
with a floor of harvesting, destemming, dropping tanks
to press, pressing whites, hunting for settling tanks to
no avail, punching down every fermentation tank in the
place, prepping barrel sets for red pressed wines, filling
barrels and jockeying for position to stow barrels somewhere,
anywhere.
And then the first tank opens up that doesn't need to
be refilled and it's downhill from there, time being freed
as quickly as it was consumed a week or more before. We
are at that point now, with 16+ hour days now shrinking
to 12 and later this week to 8 or 10. And then we
will be looking for things to do. Even Mike is taking
time off.
In summary, a condensed harvest all around the valley,
with huge percentages at some of our neighbors' coming
in in single days (up to 50%). The spectre of rain
does that to you. Also, the report on quality is
similar with our friends, very good wines despite rain,
with early picked warmer sites faring very well and later
vineyards showing more variability based on vineyard elevations,
farming practices and cropload, but in general being astonishingly
sound and possibly even excellent. That will be determined
later as we see wines from barrel after clarification. Stay
tuned.
One thing for sure, no matter how incongruously good
the vintage ends up being, winery personnel will not remember
this as a lawnchair and beer break vintage. We need
a few like that to fight complacency.
Regards,
Harry
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