Posts Tagged ‘Rousten Ranch’

#Harvest2012: The Historic Rousten Ranch!

October 6, 2012

Of the four Historic Vineyards on Monte Bello, the Rousten Ranch is probably the least-known experientially, and the most mercurial reputationally. Nestled between Jimsomare (well-known amongst Ridge aficionados for producing legendary Cabernet and very-limited-production pre-Prohibition Zinfandel) and the old Torre property (currently the home of the Monte Bello Tasting Room), its origins go all the way back to turn-of-the-century, but as it was only replanted by Ridge in 2008, it has yet to fully start making its impact felt on the release portfolio from our Monte Bello Estate.

That said, I can happily report, with delight and pleasant surprise, that Cabernet Franc from the Rousten vineyards is lined up for the final 2011 Monte Bello Assemblage, so the future is most certainly very bright for this young but historically significant planting.

To get a sense of Rousten as a property, we can take a look at it utilizing images from our Aerial Vineyard Tour. Here is Rousten in the context of the four Historic Vineyards that comprise the Monte Bello Estate:

As can be seen above, the entire altitudinal span of our estate runs from about 1200 ft up to nearly 2700 feet. Rousten itself runs from about 1800 feet to 2100 feet:

As noted above, it’s a young planting (2008 and 2010), dominated by Cabernet Sauvingon, and also features Chardonnay, Cabernet Franc, and Petit Verdot.

Due to the lunatic heat we’ve been experiencing this past week (check out the Special Weather Statement — “Sizzling Early October Temps” — below!), the harvest teams have been picking all over Monte Bello just as fast as is humanly possible …

… and they’ve been very busy yesterday and today on the Rousten property; Petit Verdot, in particular, with the goal being to get from this:

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Petit Verdot on the vine, Rousten Ranch, Monte Bello

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to this!

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Petit Verdot vine, picked clean, Rousten Ranch, Monte Bello

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Thanks so very much to our VP of Vineyard Operations David Gates for the wonderful photos, and deep bows of respect to David and the entire team for the extraordinary work they’re doing!

#Harvest2012.

Feel it.

#Harvest2012 begins on Monte Bello!

September 10, 2012

VERY happy to announce that the first grapes of #Harvest2012 have come in from Monte Bello!

The team was out in the vines early this morning, picking chardonnay grapes from the historic Rousten Ranch, and our very own Sam Howles-Banerji was there to capture the action!

The call was for 6:45am, just as the sun was beginning to lay the soft peach of its morning across the burbling gray cotton of the inversion’s mercurial fog …

And as the full and vivid measure of its brilliance came to bear on the simmering mineralized dust of the ranch, the team moved in …

And thus the hills began to echo with the clicks of flashing clippers, and the soft collapse of grapes into hands …

A strange agrarian ballet in which the severity of solitude and the togetherness of toil play out a ritual of action set to lonesome largo paces …

And through it all, the cold gray yawn of the gondola’s maw awaits …

And as the crisp sluice of fruit’s bristling sugar-acid brine whisks the morning air alive …

The hunger of the gondola is sated …

Kilroy may be AWOL, but Sam was surely there …

And so we say CONGRATULATIONS!

Congratulations to David Gates (Vice President, Vineyard Operations) and Kyle Theriot (Viticulturist, Monte Bello), and to the entire Monte Bello Vineyard Team!

#Harvest2012. Feel it.

Production & Graft: Grafting Chardonnay on Monte Bello …

May 31, 2012

Grafting is one of the great & mysterious processes in the annals of viticulture, and it is something which fascinates anyone and everyone who stumbles into the cryptic vaults of its ritual.

As with so many things we deem to be mysterious, the surface appears so simple; cut goes here, groove goes there, a little whittle this, a little whittle that, insert vine A into root B, and Presto! Nothing up my sleeve …

Grafting is nothing like that kind of simple, of course, but when in the presence of those who practice it, it can seem that way. The hands move, the magic happens, the audience is amazed.

When grafting, what the hands harness is the primal heart of nature itself, the bonding principle, the renewal impulse, the healing heart of love.

Serapio Ruiz holds in his hands the healing heart of love.

Rousten Ranch is one of four “founding” family vineyards on Monte Bello; the Rousten vines are located roughly equidistant between the middle vineyards (originally the Torre Ranch, and the current home of the Monte Bello Tasting Room), and Jimsomare (originally the Klein property). For more about our Historic Vineyard Series wines, please click the following link:

http://www.ridgewine.com/About/Historic%20Monte%20Bello%20Vineyards


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