A special section of The Healdsburg Tribune, Cloverdale Reveille, The Windsor Times and Sonoma West Times & News
October 31, 2013
Vintage 2013 — Can you spell phenomenal? By Rollie Atkinson
Staff Writer Earnest farmers count favorable weather as an answer to their most fervent prayers. When they are blessed with recordbreaking growing seasons two years in a row, they begin to wonder what they did to deserve it. No two harvests are ever the same, but comparisons of this year’s Sonoma County winegrape harvest to last year’s record tonnage crop all use the same accolades, superlatives and exclamations of greatness. The 2013 growing season was long and tempered, the fruit was clean and selectively ripe and the climax of harvest was a bit early, quick-paced but rewarded with strong prices. If tending vineyards and picking grapes wasn’t such hard work, office workers, stock brokers and corporate executives might all trade their desk jobs for driving a tractor, starting work at 3 a.m. and always keeping one eye cast on the weather charts. This week and next, the very last winegrapes are being pulled out of the vineyards and all preliminary crop numbers are pointing to a very bountiful crop, across almost all of the region’s white and red varietals. It would be incredible if the 2013 crop surpassed the 267,000 ton, $583 million record crop of 2012, but it might happen. Many growers and winemakers are reporting much heavier yields than expected, some five to 10 percent above predictions. “It was a moderate, ideal growing season for us,” said Karissa Kruse, completing her first harvest as the new president of the Sonoma County Winegrape Commission. “We had a slightly early beginning and a lot of varietals tended to ripen all at once, but the yields look outstanding. There were some real heavy crops out there.” Final 2013 crop totals from Ag Commissioner Tony Linegar won’t be tallied until mid-2014 in his official Crop Report that measures all the region’s crops and farm production. Last year, winegrapes accounted for 70 percent of the county’s total $821 million crop value. This total also includes apples, dairy, poultry, livestock, vegetables, nursery stock, oats, hay, timber and commercial fisheries.
Photo by Rollie Atkinson
FAST HANDS — The 2013 winegrape harvest started in mid-August, two weeks earlier than normal, and the heavier than expected crop kept vineyard crews on a night-and-day schedule all across the county as most red and white varietals ripened all at once. Winemakers already are raving about the quality of the crop as the last of the late harvest reds are being picked this week and next. Above is Dutton Brothers Farm's worker Oscar Carmona, picking Pinot Noir in the Gold Ridge region west of Sebastopol.
All the crop totals except apples were up in value over previous years, the official report said. After grapes, market milk ($85 million), poultry ($46 million), livestock sales ($25 million and nursery stock ($20 million) were the next biggest crops. Once dominant on the landscape, especially in Sebastopol and the western county, Gravensteins and other apples were only a $5.4 million crop in 2012. Now the big values are mostly colored purple. “The fruit is outstanding,” said vineyard and winery owner John Balletto. “It was all so clean with optimum sugars and acids. The
pinot (noir) was just some of the best I’ve ever seen.” When the mid-summer weather warmed up and no stunting heat spikes occurred, many of the white and red varietals all started to ripen at the same pace. Harvest started two to three weeks earlier than usual in most regions and wineries had to scramble to find enough tanks and storage space for all the crushed juice. “Wow, we were really in the thick of it,” reported Susan Lueker, of Simi Winery in Healdsburg. She said early planning at the winery paid off, allowing a steady pacing in the cellar for careful fruit handling. Tim Bell, winemaker at Dry
Creek Vineyards, shared the same experience. “We were a little concerned at first that everything would be too rushed, but I think the heavy crop slowed things down a bit. It all ripened and the quality right now looks really good.” Bell said he was “a little surprised” to have two great years back-to-back, adding that his winery’s zinfandel crop was 20-25 percent larger than expected this year. Others can’t stop raving about the quality. “Phenomenal” was a word used by more than one grower and winemaker, including Clay Mauritson. “The zinfandel especially,” said Mauritson,
Tasting history in locally crafted beer By Kerrie Lindecker
Staff Writer On a half-acre property in the Dry Creek Valley, a big man with a big mustache stands next to a hundred feet of 18-foot tall hop poles — it’s an image that could have easily been seen at the turn of the twentieth century, when hops were plentiful throughout the north county and hop kilns spotted the landscape. This time, though, it’s fifth generation Dry Creek resident Phil Enzenauer, who finished his sixth annual hop harvest in a field situated between sauvignon blanc, chardonnay and merlot grapevines. The Cascade hops, which were picked by Enzenaur’s vineyard management crew, were loaded in grape bins in August and sent straight to Healdburg’s Bear Republic Brewing Company, where they were “wet-hopped” to create a special batch of locallygrown, locally-produced craft beer, bringing a bit of history forward.
“I saw hops go out,” Enzenauer said, of the crop that for 100 years was just as important to the local economy as grapes are today. “And I didn’t think I’d be the one to bring them back.” Richard Norgrove, Bear Republic’s owner and master brewer is excited about the opportunity to produce a local beer, made from local ingredients. “This lets us do something really special. Phil is keeping the tradition alive,” Norgrove said. In fact, hops were one of the main cash crops in northern Sonoma County in the late 1870s through the 1920s. “The first hops in the region were planted by Amasa Bushnell and Otis Allen in the Russian River Valley,” said Holly Hoods, Healdsburg’s museum curator. “During a typical harvest in the early 1900s, whole families camped near the hop fields and parents and children spent whole days stripping the hops from the vines. It was hot, sticky work, paying the pickers one and a half cents per pound in the 1930s.
winemaker for his family’s Dry Creek winery. “It may be the best in the last 10-12 years — even better than 2009.” Mauritson and his brothers farm vineyards high above Lake Sonoma in the Rockpile AVA. “It (zinfandel) was truly amazing, unbelieveable. We always have a longer season up there and the two little rain incidents (in early September) didn’t hurt us. The winds dried everything out and we had no rot anywhere.” On Pine Mountain, the area’s newest designated AVA, northeast of Cloverdale, Tim Ward last week was still waiting to pick his last VINTAGE continues on page 4
INSIDE Wine experiences
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Lou Preston
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Vine virus strikes
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Chili pepper terroir
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The growing trend of specialized tastings and tours Dry Creek winemaker’s ‘road less traveled’ Disease can turn fruit’s juices undesirable
Locals favor more mild peppers, but some like it hot
School Garden Network [6]
Photos from around the schools as children get their hands dirty
Man versus machine
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I have, I need
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Next gen
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Winemakers test for picking preference
Farmers Guild provides resources to young farming community photo provided
BEER BOUND — Bear Republic Brewing Company owner and master brewer Richard Norgrove, Jr., takes a look at the hops grown in Dry Creek Valley just hours before they were used to make a batch of beer.
Migrant workers joined the locals in the harvesting. “After harvest, hop blossoms were taken to kilns to be dried and shipped to be used in the brewing of beer. The Wohler Ranch hop kilns were among the many operating in the early decades of the twentieth century.
By the 1960s hops were no longer a dominant crop in the area,” Hoods said. Enzenauer was in high school when the final hop fields were ripped out. He remembers when Mr. Vaskova at the end of Hassett Lane pulled his hops, some of the HOPS continues on page 4
Innovative school programs lead students into the industry
Keeping bees
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Farming flowers
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Fiber revival
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Hope for honeybees as local interest grows Industry struggles or blooms with changes in economy Moving towards a Sonoma county fiber shed