Posts Tagged ‘Oenology’

“Veraison Ho!” shouts Captain Kyle Theriot, of the Good Ship Monte Bello …

July 30, 2012

Picture Captain Kyle Theriot, high up in the crow’s nest of the good ship Monte Bello,
–actually, Monte Bello viticulturist Kyle Theriot, high up in the cab of his truck–

his tri-corner cocked jauntily against the brisk sea breezes,
–actually, his dirty straw cowboy hat, pulled low over his forehead, to stave off a July sunburn–

with his trusty parrot Emma perched watchfully on his shoulder.
–actually, his dog Emma, asleep on the front seat–

He scans the horizon watchfully, through his one seasoned, crinkle-cornered, salt-air-cracked eye,
–actually, with his two perfectly good eyes, through sunglasses–

seeking signs of dry land.
–actually, red grapes–

His eye sights on a small hump of color differentiated from the endless blue surrounding it,
–actually, his two eyes sight on a cluster of small orbs of color, differentiated from the endless greens surrounding them–

and with his gleaming hook arcing out into the sun’s cascading rays, he cries …
–actually, with his dirt-under-the-fingernails hand cradling the dangling cluster hung beneath the canopy’s enveloping cover, he says …–

Land, Ho!
–actually, Veraison, Ho!–

“Captain” Kyle Theriot in the Gate Block …

Veraison, detail

All of which is to say that we have CONFIRMED veraison at Monte Bello! Specifically, in the Gate Block cab, down at Jimsomare.

Which means, for those of you not familiar with the term, that the grapes they are a-ripenin’!

(For more information about veraison, please click here.)

And for a real-life sense of just what it’s like to head for Jimsomare, knowing there’s veraison afoot …

From Grape to Glass: The Journey

February 23, 2012

That a grape undergoes a transformative journey en route to its incarnation as a bottle of wine is reasonably self-evident; wine could of course not be possible without said journey taking place.

But in fact, there is more than meets the eye afoot, and more than one journey underway.

The original magic of the vine-to-wine transubstantiation resides in the overlapping concentrics of history. A vineyard is a journey unto itself; soil to seed, plant to fruit; year in and year out, the ever-deepening Samsaric encirculation of life, the poetry of the perennial:

The vineyards crews
don’t dare mention drought.
The rain is going to come this weekend.

Already I have seen
three snowflakes prancing lightly
like young reindeer in the air.

Back from holidays, they start in
on the pruning of the slopes, repeating
mantras to their dogs, laughing in Spanish.

From the gun club by the quarry
comes the shots
that we all hear on a delay.

We amaze ourselves, reminded
that the stars we beg to weep
have died already.

There is nowhere
for the last year to go,
but to the ground.

Already
every day
is growing larger.

Spindling out from this ever-in-rotation  inner agrarian hub, like spokes of some great metaphysical wheel, are the revelations of vintage; each season a season of imagination, impossibility, and faith.; new journeys all; from the grape, to the glass.

This is what we taste when we taste honest and authentic wine; the history of the vineyard, the history of the harvest, the histories of the living and the dead, the biology of sweet human endeavor, in forever soulful congress with the earth, with the sky, with the gods.

The  Old World. The New World.

The Journey.

(The following film short is a pictorial chronicle of a grape’s journey from vineyard to bottle, featuring Ridge Vineyards Geyserville, set to the music of Antonín Dvořák’s ”From The New World” symphony; a work composed back in the era when Geyserville’s “Old Patch” was just being planted.)

Integrated Pest Management at Ridge Vineyards, The Movie!

July 2, 2009

Here’s a few questions for you:

-Have you ever wondered what Integrated Pest Management is?

-Have you ever thought about Agro-Oenology?

-Have you ever wondered what mealybugs and the band Survivor have in common?

-Can you spell Cryptolaemus Montrouzieri, and did you know they ship by mail?

-Do you know what a “Viticulturist” actually does?

I have a tremendously fascinating video I’d like to share with you. Caleb Mosely, our viticulturist here at Monte Bello, has been very involved in something called “Integrated Pest Management,” which is, per the website of the Environmental Protection Agency, “an effective and environmentally sensitive approach to pest management that relies on a combination of common-sense practices. IPM programs use current, comprehensive information on the life cycles of pests and their interaction with the environment. This information, in combination with available pest control methods, is used to manage pest damage by the most economical means, and with the least possible hazard to people, property, and the environment.”

For our purposes here at Ridge, Integrated Pest Management is yet one more way of trying to harmonize with our land and environment in the service of sustainable, ecologically-sensitive viticultural production; I personally think this is truly one of the most fascinating things we’re currently engaged in, and I’ve been tremendously impressed with Caleb’s dedication to, and knowledge about, these philosophies and methodologies. I encourage you to watch the video, it’s phenomenal! You can see it here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0iRS17G4sCc

 


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