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Weather Today
Rain has finally come, with Friday-on being damp, the leaves electric in color, the mood smug with pleasure that all our fruit has been harvested.
Wednesday and Thursday, dry and gorgeous, saw the final blocks
of Riesling harvested with perfect ripeness — moderate sugars,
high acids, great flavors!
Harvest to-date
Total:
293 tons
(87% of forecast)
COMPLETE
Pinot Noir: 122.9 tons
(75% of forecast)
COMPLETE
Pinot Gris: 43 tons
(101% of forecast)
COMPLETE
Chardonnay: 103.2 tons
(98% of forecast) COMPLETE
Gruner veltliner: 1 ton
(125% of forecast)
COMPLETE
Riesling: 12.1 tons
(75% of forecast)
Gamay noir: 2 tons
(95% of forecast)
COMPLETE
Pinot blanc: 5.5 tons
(94% of forecast)
COMPLETE
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November 2, 2008
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images to enlarge |
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| Post-harvest, the winery and Corral Creek Vineyard slip into deep Fall with electric colors. |
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| Molly and vineyard crew on the last day of harvest, bringing in Riesling. |
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| The winery yard, night silence, late in harvest. |
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| October ends our fiscal year, so sales activity peaks too. Here John House impassions visitors to the winery tasting room. |
Great Vintage, Thanks to An Indian Summer
The parallels to 1999 are complete for the 2008 vintage.
An exceptionally cool growing season ends in full ripening
warmth, sun and dryness, giving us possibly one of the
best vintages Oregon has seen.
The 1999 vintage saw green fruit at Labor Day, as did
this year; cumulative degree day measures of warmth through
October 31 of 2043 in 1999 were the lowest we'd seen in
the last decade or more--that is, until 2008's 1977 degree
days (average for the last decade is 2228 DDs); with 2.34
inches, rainfall was half-an-inch lower than average for
October (2.74 inches) in 1999, but higher than 2008's 1.66
inches from September 30 through October 30.
The wine quality has yet to be proved, but all signs are
that 2008 will be the equivalent to 1999, one of my two
or three favorite vintages. But my favorite vintages often
aren't my banker and accountant's favorite vintages, since
in both of these vintages we played it safe by crop thinning
to levels of 1.5 tons per acre, to guarantee full ripening
if we failed to get good weather — which, of course,
Mother Nature perversely gave us.
Our harvest began September
30th and ended October 30th. During those 31 days we took
vine development, that at bloom had been three weeks late
and had caught up to only two weeks late picking our first
fruit, and ended picking Riesling on-time. Although short
in tonnage with, for example, a drop from 2.4 tons per
acre for Pinot Noir across all vineyards in the prior 5
vintages to 1.9 tons per acre in 2008, the vintage uniformity,
depth of fruit, flavors and color, and the disease-free
nature of the fruit will be well worth the minimum 25%
increase in fruit costs.
Examples of amazingly high quality fruit extend from Pinot
Noirs' fully ripe flavors and colors, but with alcohols
in the 13-13.5% range, to Riesling where 23+% sugars and
full flavors came with amazingly age worthy 9-10 g/L acids.
Look for the same kinfe-edged, white-fruited and ripely-flavored
whites and even richer, deeper Pinot Noirs than 2007, a
stellar vintage in its own right. There will be less wine available thanks
to small crops, but drinking less and better is always
good.
And now we begin planning next year, new plantings, possibly
cave building, and long trips to warmer climes during the
winter.
Regards,
Harry
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