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	<title>Ultimate Pinot &#187; Cover Crops</title>
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	<link>http://www.ultimatepinot.com</link>
	<description>Candid discussion on the philosophies, practices and problems involved in making the Ultimate Pinot Noir</description>
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		<title>The Annual Pinot Noir Cycle</title>
		<link>http://www.ultimatepinot.com/the-annual-pinot-noir-cycle/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ultimatepinot.com/the-annual-pinot-noir-cycle/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 2008 20:35:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Anne Moller-Racke</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Cover Crops]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fermentation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pruning]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ultimatepinot.com/?p=82</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[As an agricultural enterprise, we are in synch with our culture&#8217;s calendar, developed when the vast majority of people still lived and worked on farms. It&#8217;s quiet in the winery and in the vineyards now, so there is time to celebrate the holidays and to reflect both on the past year and the one to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As an agricultural enterprise, we are in synch with our culture&#8217;s calendar, developed when the vast majority of people still lived and worked on farms. It&#8217;s quiet in the winery and in the vineyards now, so there is time to celebrate the holidays and to reflect both on the past year and the one to come.</p>
<p>Kenneth reports that all of the wines are good and stable, so he can relax. We carefully watched a couple of our Russian River blocks that were hard hit by frost and then ripened quickly with the heat. Something happens when fruit is stressed that increases the chances of getting a stuck fermentation at the end. Because we are very hands-off and gentle, we try to nudge through and we succeeded.</p>
<p>Fruit from other blocks also went through some weather extremes but had enough time to recover and ticked along ripening slowly. That fruit was very sound when it came in, so overall we had it pretty easy in the cellar in 2008.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s a silent time in the vineyard. Our crew is gone for the holidays and nothing is happening. We seeded our cover crop for erosion control and the rain has established it. Now the rain is percolating down into the soils to alleviate our drought conditions.</p>
<p>With all that&#8217;s going on in the world, we all want a positive and prosperous 2009. Even though we had a tough year farming, mother nature moves on, and we must, too. The beauty of the practice of pruning, which we begin next month, is that it&#8217;s a ritualistic taking away of the past year, a process of cleaning up for a fresh start.</p>
<p>As we move into the new year, we will have a new young man join our team. John interned with us and he will now assist Kenneth with winemaking.</p>
<p>January will bring our annual tasting of the previous vintage with famed winemaker Zelma Long and her accomplished viticulturist husband, Dr. Phil Freese. We treasure the perspective and insights they bring to us.</p>
<p>We&#8217;ll also look at various clones and selections of Pinot Noir for some new plantings in our Russian River vineyard. And we hope by late spring or early summer to open a small tasting room in Carneros and offer vineyard tours by appointment.</p>
<p>I will have the opportunity to attend some events, including the Best of the Best tasting in Miami and the World of Pinot Noir. As in any business and industry, there is an annual rhythm.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m so glad that a big part of my life is agriculture, because nature sweeps you along in its flow. You have to accept its terms, but you also have to keep your own spontaneity and creativity in dealing with it. I&#8217;m grateful as well that our project involves estate grown fruit, because even though, for example, we experienced large frost losses this year, we have to take the long view and not attempt shortcuts that will come back later to haunt us. Our reward will be a deeper understanding of our craft.</p>
<p>We all join in wishing you a wonderful new year.</p>
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		<title>My Position on Our Team</title>
		<link>http://www.ultimatepinot.com/my-position-on-our-team/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ultimatepinot.com/my-position-on-our-team/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 24 Feb 2008 23:47:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Nabor Camarena</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Cover Crops]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Soil]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Water]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ultimatepinot.com/my-position-on-our-team/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It&#8217;s been raining off and on this week. We only have a day or two of pruning left, but we&#8217;re not working. The cover crops are so high and wet in the rows that we quickly get soaked to the waist, and that&#8217;s miserable.The rainfall has been pretty evenly distributed this winter. Although the soil [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.ultimatepinot.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/01/nabor_camarena2.jpg" onclick="ps_imagemanager_popup(this.href,'Nabor Camarena','332','500');return false" onfocus="this.blur()" rel="lightbox"><img src="http://www.ultimatepinot.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/01/.thumbs/.nabor_camarena2.jpg" alt="Nabor Camarena" title="Nabor Camarena" style="border: 1px solid #777777; padding: 6px" align="right" border="0" height="200" hspace="6" vspace="6" width="133" /></a>It&#8217;s been raining off and on this week. We only have a day or two of pruning left, but we&#8217;re not working. The cover crops are so high and wet in the rows that we quickly get soaked to the waist, and that&#8217;s miserable.The rainfall has been pretty evenly distributed this winter. Although the soil is pretty saturated, the cover crops have done a good job absorbing excess moisture. We haven&#8217;t seen a cover crop of this size in years. The vigorous growth is welcome, because the roots penetrate the soil. When the roots die back, they leave room for oxygen and water to move down deep, and the plants also break down into fertilizer and organic matter in the soil.</p>
<p>The vines look relaxed, in great shape for bud break. They have more energy this year, which makes sense following a smaller crop in 2007. And they need the water. Although they are dormant, a cold, dry winter can prove stressful for vines.</p>
<p>Anne and I were talking yesterday, and I told her that this is my 24th vintage. I know enough, but not everything. My job is interesting because it&#8217;s a constant learning experience.</p>
<p>I play a game with myself, like a football coach. I don&#8217;t focus on the end of the game. Instead, I try to concentrate on it play by play &#8211; a five-yard run here, getting into field goal position there. Yes, I have an idea of what a whole vintage might bring, but right now I&#8217;m concentrating totally on pruning, and next week, on tying the canes to trellis wires.</p>
<p>As I look back over 24 years, I realize there are many more people making wine now. Many have gone to school and are good at putting the numbers together. In the old days, people made wine more with intuition and talent, but the results were more vintage dependent because they had fewer tools to work with. Today, I think there may be fewer people with talent in our industry. But those who are both well-educated and talented &#8212; they are exceptional. Talent also has a lot to do with passion for your work.</p>
<p>Our job in the vineyard is to create components for great wine &#8211; the proper tannins, acid, sugar and fruit flavors and aromas. If it is necessary to manipulate the wines in the winery to make up for deficiencies from the vineyard, the wine will be inferior.</p>
<p>Kenneth is very involved with the vineyard. When he began here as winemaker, he was on the bench. He became a good player, then a team leader, and now he&#8217;s helping to coach the team. He is very confident in his decisions. I joked with him never to believe he&#8217;s the owner, because in football they may have power, but they may not know all they need to.</p>
<p>I watch Kenneth walk the vineyards. He knows what he needs and what he&#8217;s looking for, and he has developed intuition. He gets a lot of information from the grapes, and that&#8217;s good for our team.</p>
<p>Kenneth really starts getting involved around veraison (when grapes soften and change color). Then he&#8217;s like a chef at the farmer&#8217;s market or the fish market &#8211; he wants to know everything about his raw material. If a chef has the finest ingredients, he has to do very little, but he has to know exactly what to do. I think that&#8217;s the role of the winemaker with outstanding grapes.</p>
<p>My position is to make sure both Anne and Kenneth have all the information from the vineyard that they need. The better the information I provide, the more success we will have. Everything in the vineyard system is connected &#8211; fog, humidity, temperature, soil moisture, wind. If you are calm, you see it all. So you take it all in, digest it and present your interpretation. Accurate, honest information leads to trust and that eventually makes good wine. Over the years, Anne and I have learned to speak precisely the same language.</p>
<p>So I need to get my hands and boots dirty, be aware, gather information and stay connected with my team. It&#8217;s a discipline, a way you live. Larry Hyde taught me to pay attention. I try to teach guys who are learning to ask themselves, why am I cutting? What will this mean?</p>
<p>When you pay attention, you see so much more. And you become aware of the consequences of your actions. When you are pruning one vine, it hardly seems to matter if you make two cuts or four cuts. But when you prune a thousand vines, that&#8217;s two thousand additional cuts.</p>
<p>Recently I replaced my water heater, so I had to solder copper pipe. I had never done that before, and that&#8217;s a helpless feeling. When I asked the experts, they told me it was easy &#8211; yes, for them!  That experience was good for me, because it made me more compassionate with the guys who are still learning. And we&#8217;re all still learning.</p>
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		<title>Back to the Future: Old Practices</title>
		<link>http://www.ultimatepinot.com/back-to-the-future-old-practices/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ultimatepinot.com/back-to-the-future-old-practices/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 15 May 2007 11:43:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Anne Moller-Racke</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Cover Crops]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spacing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yeast]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ultimatepinot.com/back-to-the-future-old-practices/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[KJ:  Someone asked at a tasting recently about the benefits of spontaneous or native yeast fermentation. I said that they create little “flaws” in the wine. They are slower building cultures &#8212; not the quick, clean commercial yeasts of the 1970s and 1980s &#8212; and they produce more complexities, including higher volatile acidity (acetic [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.ultimatepinot.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/01/nabor_kenneth_anne.jpg" onclick="ps_imagemanager_popup(this.href,'Back to the Future: Old Practices','400','266');return false" onfocus="this.blur()" rel="lightbox"><img src="http://www.ultimatepinot.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/01/.thumbs/.nabor_kenneth_anne.jpg" alt="Anne Moller-Racke , Kenneth Juhasz  and Nabor Camarena" title="Anne Moller-Racke , Kenneth Juhasz  and Nabor Camarena" style="border: 1px solid #777777; padding: 6px" align="right" border="0" height="133" hspace="6" vspace="6" width="200" /></a>KJ:  Someone asked at a tasting recently about the benefits of spontaneous or native yeast fermentation. I said that they create little “flaws” in the wine. They are slower building cultures &#8212; not the quick, clean commercial yeasts of the 1970s and 1980s &#8212; and they produce more complexities, including higher volatile acidity (acetic acid), which merits our attention.</p>
<p>There are usually multiple indigenous yeasts present that start fermenting and add complexity, and then the strongest yeast cultures finish the wine. One facility we know used to be a sparkling wine cellar, so there is a strong bayanus resident yeast population there.</p>
<p>Such resident populations cause us to be very careful in our cellar practices. For example, we have ozone (O3) machines available for cleaning – ozone is the second most powerful oxidant in nature and is very efficient for sterilization. And we have steamers for barrel cleansing. But we don’t want to get too clean.</p>
<p>Why? Because some of the “terroir” can come from off the wall! In Burgundian cellars, the walls have something spongy like moss growing on them. Talk about biodiversity.</p>
<p>Inoculating wines with a known yeast culture gives you a tool. If I were making a half million cases of a given wine, I’d want everything squeaky clean. For small lot production, more and more winemakers are using native yeasts. You need to know what the native strain or strains are in your cellar and how fast they will go. Slower fermentations allow more things to happen.</p>
<p>Heat is important to get the fermentation going. Cold soaks can develop ethyl acetate, so you have to pay attention to that. Then either fermentation begins or you inoculate with a yeast strain that will start it.</p>
<p>NC:  In farming, we have been returning more and more to old practices. We’re more green. We use organic practices although we may not go through the paperwork to be certified organic. Organic is more expensive, but we have a more educated clientele who appreciate that. We’re a long way from the heavier herbicides like Paraquat that used to be applied. And the vines show what they get from the earth.</p>
<p>KJ: In Burgundy, they say their soils are finally back to where they were before World War II.</p>
<p>AMR:  There was a Carneros Quality Alliance Pinot Noir study in which a UC Davis researcher looked at the microorganisms in the soil. She checked our 490 block and a parcel next to it that was never planted to grapes, and we were pleased to learn that the bacteria and fungi in the soils were not significantly different.</p>
<p>We cultivated every other row, planted cover crops and used very little fertilizer. That organic material breaking down into humus aerates the soil, makes it friable and improves water penetration. These old practices now have a new household term to describe them – sustainable.</p>
<p>I think the trend to organic and now biodynamic farming is a reaction to heavy science and a shift toward the natural and the spiritual. We collectively discovered that DDT and baby formula weren’t that wonderful after all.</p>
<p>NC:  The problem was that we lost our connection with natural science.</p>
<p>AMR:  Yes, we could read nature, and then our instincts got out of touch.</p>
<p>NC:  We’ve had to re-learn to believe in ourselves and to trust our instincts.</p>
<p>AMR:  And that process requires a lot of experience. Our tendency is to apply scientific methods and ignore our gut feelings. But often we don’t know enough variables to solve the equation.  The art of wine growing is a combination of informed instinct and science.</p>
<p>Yesterday we looked at block 190 and compared it to block 490. You get a feel for the difference, not a definitive measurement. You have the same soil, same water. So you take in the “vibes” of the vineyard – color, nuance, a leaf that’s a little curled, the condition of a short tip, the underside of another leaf.  It’s like meeting a person and forming an opinion on their health – you take in their skin color, posture, energy level, a sparkle in their eyes.</p>
<p>NC:  We constantly test ourselves by running different variables through the equation and seeing if it seems right. You ask yourself, “I feel this way. Why?”</p>
<p>AMR:  Yes, and you have markers. This didn’t happen. Why not?</p>
<p>NC:  Most of the time when I go into the vineyard, I feel good. All is well. But sometimes I sense something is different. For example, you can smell the mealy bug. And you can smell mildew.</p>
<p>AMR:  It’s a moldy smell.</p>
<p>NC:  I know that in block 4-89, there’s more chance for mildew, so I go there and see.</p>
<p>AMR:  You know what is normal for that site.</p>
<p>NC:  Right, and as we prepare the vines for the next vintage – pruning, maintaining the irrigation and trellising systems, etc. – we also prepare ourselves.  What will I do differently based on having been through another harvest?</p>
<p>KC:  I subscribe to a form of preparation – it’s called vacation.</p>
<p>AMR:  This year is going to be different. Some blocks are through bloom already and some have barely started.</p>
<p>KJ:  I’m excited about block 190. You guys made a real difference there. Good stuff!</p>
<p>AMR:  By holding it back. But we have to be careful not to stunt growth by leaving it in full cover for three years and holding back too much. That goes to the issue of spacing between vines.</p>
<p>You configure a vineyard based on your judgment of the potential of the soil – will it be a vigorous site or a more restrictive one? But you also have to consider logistics, like tractors. Initially, vineyard spacing in California was based on the size of tractors manufactured in the Midwest for Midwestern agriculture, for farming wheat and corn.  So you have to consider your equipment in order to manage and work the block in a timely manner. If you’re not on time, you negate the effects of the best spacing.</p>
<p>Our 490 West and 490 East blocks are different, with heavier clay soil on 490 W. We may leave that block in full cover crop for a year to slow it down, controlling vigor the way we have in 190, just to see how big the crop is.</p>
<p>KJ:  Can we determine the optimum cover there?</p>
<p>AMR:  Often cover crops don’t get started very well and there are ox-tongues everywhere. Legumes are good when cultivated. They have big, fibrous stalks that aid the soil structure. If they are aggressive, they really suck up the water and nutrients. Fescues would be nice, but grasses are harder to establish and quite expensive. And you can’t be married to that crop – we are grape growers, not cover crop growers.</p>
<p>KJ:  It would be good if you didn’t cultivate at all.</p>
<p>AMR:  Well, block 190 is in its second year of full cover, and look how it has diminished.  Full cover is the most devigorating practice. After a couple of years of full cover, we would cultivate every other row.  We would neither cultivate the entire block nor leave cover on the whole block.</p>
<p>With grass cover, you do see more vine stress as well as more nematodes and gophers. It’s funny to see some vineyards going a second full circle back into full cultivation.</p>
<p>Anyway, cover crop is a tool we can’t underestimate. We have to anticipate its effects because it’s hard to bring it back if we’re too devigorating. I’m tempted to cultivate every other row in 490 because we have already brought it under control.</p>
<p>NC:  Let’s leave it. You can always drip irrigate.</p>
<p>KJ:  I’m just happy with the direction the grapes, and wines, from that block are going. It’s powerful.</p>
<p>AMR: We also like irrigation as a tool. Good spacing comes in because there are more growing points. If your spacing is too crowded, you have more fungus and disease and it’s harder to farm. You may get greater competition, but you also get shading and that can make the fruit vegetative.</p>
<p>On the Sonoma Coast, they planted meter by meter, too tight, and now some growers are pulling out every other row.</p>
<p>KJ:  For us, 1,200 vines per acre seems a pretty good number.</p>
<p>AMR:  That kind of moderate number works on many levels. It’s easier for various pieces of equipment to work, like any tractor with a picking bin. If your planting is denser, you get more tons per acre, but with 2,100 vines as we have in block 4A07, you really increase your labor. Four tons translates as 3-1/2 pounds of fruit per vine, and the cost per vine is too high.</p>
<p>NC:  We have to be aware of how many cuts per acre we’ll make in pruning, or how many shoots per acre we have to pull when suckering. One cluster per shoot means 3-1/2 pounds per vine. You can have 17 leaves per cluster and produce four tons per acre. That’s a commercial yield.</p>
<p>AMR:  We tried one cluster per shoot, but Phil (Dr. Phil Freese, viticultural consultant) doesn’t like that. He thinks it’s better to take some shoots out to open up the canopy and average 1-1/2 clusters per shoot by alternating, 1, 2, 1, 2.</p>
<p>NC:  After we’re finished, most shoots have one cluster.</p>
<p>AMR:  And you can also take wings off the clusters to even them out. If we go to one cluster per shoot too early, the berry size will increase too much.</p>
<p>NC:  When the wings are behind, we take them out. In block 4A07, there are bigger clusters and bigger berries. That may be the rootstock, and also we need more water. And all the Dijon clones have large berries, but particularly the 667 that we have there.</p>
<p>AMR:  Yes, 115 has the smallest berries, 777 in the middle and 667 the largest. At Nugent Vineyards, they are planted on 4450 rootstock, and the 115 has smaller berries, looser clusters and thinner skins than the 667.</p>
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