Planting Victoria Block

April 19th, 2011 | Posted in Our Stories, Prince Edward County

May 2001 Victoria Day the first vines on our farm were planted on what was to become know as the Victoria Block. Located just east of the barn that would become the winery and just north of the wonderful old house that we call home, the field, long planted to alfalfa, seemed perfect. A long field allowing for row lengths of just about a km (250 vines per row at 4ft spacing) meant efficiency and economy for the planting while the width of the field allowed for 9 foot row spacing which would give us lots of earth for hilling up with a gentle southern slope. The hedgerows were clear and the stream runs by the southern end of the field allowing for air drainage during cold episodes. Shallow intensely gravelly slightly alkaline soils (depths in this block range from about 15 to 24 inches) with highly fractured calcarous limestone seemed to indicate enough challenge to the vines to naturally limit crop loads while providing excellent drainage and heat retention. I decided to plant chardonnay and gamay in this block and after much deliberation chose clone 76 for the chardonnay and clone for the gamay.

The day before planting day was crazy with preparation as we dragged kiddie pools out to strategic shady locations along the north end of the field, then dragged the water to fill them and finally when the warmth of the day was spent carried the vines themselves out to spend the night soaking up the water in the pools and beginning the acclimatization process.

The next day proved the first example of a lesson I would have to learn over and over. I had planned a party … champagne, friends family, food all to celebrate the beginning of something wonderful. With the champagne chilling and food prepared all that was left was for the planter to arrive. Abe Weins and his wonderful machine that would take the slender twigs capped in red wax and plant them in straight rows using GPS was to have arrived early that day farming indifferent to man made holidays and begin. By noon he still wasn’t there but our guests were, rain was threatening and I could feel the sharp edges of panic poking at me. I drove up the road to the corner of Benway and Closson where Abe was planting the day before and sure enough he was still there. Things are a little behind he said, trouble changing the equipment over to the narrower rows he said, grounds pretty wet slow going he said and then looking up at the sky and the threat of rain he said if we get anymore I’m going to have to quit until it dries out some. I can’t begin to describe my feelings at that moment but I can say it was only the first of many times in my last ten years in the vineyard that I felt a sense of frustration to incredibly powerful I could taste the bitterness on my tongue. I tried again: if the rain didn’t come and if the planting went smoothly from here on in when did he think he would be arriving for set up … he said maybe just maybe mind toward the end of the day. I went home to entertain our guests with a tour of the soon to be vineyard and copious quantities of alcohol all the while praying please don’t rain. Abe did show up that day long after the last guest had gone and planted the first row of chardonnay as the sun fell low on the horizon. It was hard planting; the soil was wet and so incredibly gravelly the chucks of dirt at times would bury the tiny vines. I knew there would be weeks of work ahead to find and properly seat each vine to ensure they would thrive but still it was thrilling to see it all begin after almost 2 years of planning and dreaming. The next day was smoother and the next smoother still no party just the moan of the tractor and the occasional bang as the planter hit yet another rock ledge in the vineyard and then it was planted and Abe was gone off to another farm to begin the whole process again. I must have prayed pretty hard that Victoria Day though because it did not rain again in the County until the end of August turning out to be one of the worst drought years the County has seen. I worked for weeks setting each vine in place, the old universal tractor broke, the weeds started growing long before the vines did and the rest of the summer is a blur memories of trading my children beach time for weeding time, early morning spraying with the backpack sprayer, trailing behind a water tank when the tractor finally did come back trying to water the struggling young plants. A whole new life began for me and my young family that summer. We called the delicate process of seating the vines stomping and due to the very vigorous nature of that particular activity I quit going to the gym too tired some days to do much more than make supper and fall asleep in my jeans only to wake up with rocks stuck to my face. Dad used to go out to the vineyard and find a weedy spot and just sit and dig them out. By September all the young plants lost their leaves and we began to try and hill them up a process which took us 3 full months to master due in no small part to the wetness of the fall; all I wanted for Christmas that year was the vines hilled up. I think we finished Christmas eve. At the end I was humbler, I was wiser and I was much fitter. Somehow despite everything I think I fell in love that summer!

Adam’s final thoughts on Harvest 2009

November 14th, 2009 | Posted in Ontario wine, Prince Edward County, Updates

It is finally over, all the fruit is in. I think the guys wanted to home to warmer climates pretty badly because some days they were picking almost 10 tonnes!

 

All the pinot noir is pressed. I think it may rival ’07….. deep colour, concentrated flavours and aromas, a good year for pinot.

 

Another gem is turning out to be the unoaked chard, it has been fermenting under 15° C. for weeks now a nice slow fermentation resulting in a lot of finesse with very pronounced flavours…. Apple, pear and other orchard fruit

 

The 2009 sparkling base is showing very well. It is extremely clean. With two vintages of sparkling wine under our belt I think it is now safe to judge the quality of the base wine and again it may rival the ’07 which by the way is at long last available for purchase as of this week!

The rest of harvest….

November 1st, 2009 | Posted in Ontario wine, Prince Edward County

After that first week things began to blur together between the long days and even longer nights with the inversion fans running to ward off the frost for a little longer. Sleep fast became a luxury and the crew became edgier. We moved into pinot noir next and picked the Diana Block first bringing the fruit into the winery in the totes it was picked in. The process was ardous this year as the fields were still muddy and we needed to keep the mud away from the fruit so the boxes had to moved in a single layer instead of stacked. Brian and Justin made tripp after trip carrying the bins in from behind the barn. They were moved into the processing room where a team of 4 waited to separate the great from the merely good…….. the interesting thing we found this year was the ratio of perfect fruit was actually higher than in previous vintages. We have been running at about 30% perfect but this year it was closer to 50%. Good news for Grange Diana Block Pinot Noir and actually the pick was finished up in only 3 days this year. After that it was on to Riesling in the hopes of buying a few more days of sunshine for our Gamay Noir; the fans were still running at night and we were starting to get some nice warm sunny days. We were amazed the little 3 acre block of Riesling in Gracefield actually yielded 13 tonnes (it has never given us more than 3 to date). Finally it was time to pick the Gamay the fruit had benefitted from the additional hang time and I think everyone agreed it was worth the wait but we were all glad to get it off. Cabernet Franc was the last to be picked ever the pleasant surprise the fruit hangs beautifully, ripens predictably and tastes truly delicious with beautiful red fruit. I wish I could plant more ……..

Harvest 2009 – Day 6

October 9th, 2009 | Posted in Ontario wine, Prince Edward County

Friday  - payday, laundry day and shopping day for the crew. The cellar crew played catch up and clean up and prepared for the next day’s pick.

Monday, Monday

October 8th, 2009 | Posted in Prince Edward County

Monday was not nearly so pretty, cold and overcast, but the crew headed out and the bottling run was underway .  Tasting room staff was pressed into duty… well, until a belt in the bottler gave way .  Despite this, somehow, the first of the 2008 gamay noir made it into bottle.  Tasting Room staff ran up to change into uniform and we began destemming and crushing the pinot gris grapes picked so far.  They will be stored in the refrigerated transport for a 24 hour cold soak in hopes of capturing that elusive hint of pink we found for the first time last year in the 2008 Pinot Gris.

 The yields are very good with the extra moisture in the grapes from the recent rains.  Prince Edward County had been without rain for most of August and September, so a little rain was a welcome thing.