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August 07, 2009

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Robert Dwyer

Thanks for this understandable and interesting update into what the impact of the weather might be on wines produced from this year's grapes. Really fascinating.

Ben

Thanks for the interesting update Marco. I guess when my lawn is green and vibrant in August, that’s not a good sign for the wine grapes. Every few years we seem to get a summer that’s cooler and wetter than normal, but it’s seldom consistently cloudy like this. It sounds like this season could still produce some stellar wines if the weather turns suddenly warm and dry for the next few months… not holding my breath.

The volcano theory may be spot on. In the 90’s there was a volcanic eruption in Indonesia and we had great skiing for a couple of years. Then there was 1816, “The Year Without a Summer” which was brought about by volcanic eruptions. Eh, it could be worse Marco ;)

Marco Montez

Robert... thanks for the comment. More to come later as we progress through the "Summer".

Ben... yeah, green lawn despite no irrigation means trouble for the vines. Thankfully we aren't dying from starvation like thousands did in 1816. Thanks!

Meghan

Have the hot days of August helped at all? I could think of worse things than lots of Rosé and sparkling :), but I certainly hope things improve for your sake!

Marco Montez

Hi Meghan,

They sure have helped! Starting to see signs of Veraison in the vineyard for some grapes which means that we may not be so far behind after all. However, the vines are still under a lot of pressure due to humid conditions even when it doesn't rain. It's work in progress and it could grape quality could still go either way... the next 6-8 weeks will be critical.

Thanks for asking!

Derek F.

All this rain from Danny is not helping right now. I am praying for some more hot days and cool nights.

Elizabeth Snow

Weather is something we just can't control. It's good that you are at least able to vary the kinds of product, so that you are still making something that works for this kind of weather. Be thankful for that - when poor weather affects tomatoes, as it did mine this year, there isn't a whole lot that can be done except picking prematurely to avoid crop spoil.

Something makes me wonder if a greenhouse environment could work in summers with poor weather. Have you ever heard of it being done for your trade?

Marco Montez

Hi Elizabeth... I hear you about the tomatoes. I have never heard of a greenhouse for grapevines so I don't really know the implications. I'm guessing that it could be done, but it would probably be very expensive for it to work. In the end, it would add yet additional production costs to a product that is already very costly to grow. Thanks for reading and commenting... really appreciate that.

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