Blog Posts matching HARVEST:

15 Weeks of Pinot Noir - Week One: Color Change!

Wednesday, August 25th 2010 by
 

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2010 Vintage Forecast

Thursday, August 26th 2010 by

Dr. Greg Jones of Southern Oregon University Forecasts the 2010 Vintage
In a cool growing season, mitigating risk for a potential late harvest

Jones provides an overview of the summer growing season and forecasts the 2010 vintage conditions in Oregon wine country. Key considerations for harvest include:

  • Overall, at this point heat accumulation is running 20-30% down from the long-term averages at all stations statewide. If you assume average conditions from today to the end of Oct (average temps, not rainfall) then this year will end up being the coolest in the past 20 years.
  • If you do the same thing for the coolest vintages in the last 10 years, 2005 (1) and 2007 (2), then the probability of making up enough GDD (Growing Degree Days) to match 2005 is 80-90% and 70-80% for 2007, both cooler vintages where ripeness was not a given in some regions and with certain varieties.
While specifically reporting on the Southern Oregon growing regions, Jones' key assessments can be applied to growing regions statewide. And, as Jones notes, similar conditions are found not only statewide, but in grapegrowing regions throughout the western United States.

Industry members are encouraged to consider the impacts of potential late and cool harvest conditions and implementation of risk management techniques such as crop thinning to avoid a less than optimally ripe harvest. However, it's important to note that conditions could change and that there are both challenges and opportunities in cooler vintages and that classic, quality wines are often made in vintages where there is farming on the edge.
 
For more information and to read Dr. Jones' full report, please click here.
Labels: harvest
 

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15 Weeks of Pinot Noir: Week Two - Dropping Fruit

Wednesday, September 1st 2010 by
 

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15 Weeks of Pinot Noir: Week 3 - Getting Ready for Harvest

Tuesday, September 7th 2010 by
 

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15 Weeks of Pinot Noir: Week 7 - Grape Sampling

Tuesday, October 5th 2010 by

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First Day of Harvest 2010

Monday, October 11th 2010 by
Phew!  On Thursday we had our official First Day of Harvest 2010, working in our Walnut and Concert Blocks to bring in some of our Pinot Noir grapes before the weekend rains.  Harvest will begin again Tuesday or Wednesday of this week, and then it will be full steam ahead!  Check below for pictures from our first day! 
 
Vineyard Manager Luis, who has been with Sokol Blosser for more than 30 harvests, oversees the Pinot Noir grapes coming in from our North Concert Block.
 
Grapes going into the hopper and down to the sorting line!
 
Our stalwart sorting line crew, up to their elbows in Pinot Noir and making sure that only the most high-quality clusters make it into our blend.
 

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15 Weeks of Pinot Noir: Week 8 - Harvest!

Wednesday, October 13 2010 by

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Pinot Noir Punchdowns

Thursday, October 14th 2010 by
Our stalwart Cellar Crew stayed late last night to finish second punchdowns on our Pinot Noir fermenters.  Punchdowns are important because as our Pinots ferment, a layer of grape skins are forced by rising carbon dioxide gas to the top of our 2.85 ton stainless steel fermenters, forming a "cap" that prevents the skins from interacting with the juice.  See what punchdowns are like below!
 
Mario and Doug with the punchdown apparatus over a fermentation tank.
 
Mario oversees the punchdown.  Look at all those grapeskins!
 
The punchdown machine breaks through the tough cap.
 

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KATU Reports on Air Cannons

Friday, October 15th 2010 by
There is a short commercial first, then the news story that aired on KATU with Margy Lynch that follows.
 
 
 

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15 Weeks of Pinot Noir: Week Nine - Sorting Line!

Monday, October 18th 2010 by
Labels: harvest video
 

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15 Weeks of Pinot Noir: Week 11 - Barrelling

Wednesday, November 3rd 2010 by
Labels: video wine harvest
 

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15 Weeks of Pinot Noir: Week 12 - Post-Fermentation Maceration

Tuesday, November 9th 2010 by
 

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Glad to Be Back!

Thursday, September 22nd 2011 by
Whew - I'm glad to be back!  I've just returned to Sokol Blosser after 3 months focusing on my new son and growing family.  The summer was a very special time for the McGuires - lots of learning (so many diapers!), lots of catnaps following disjointed nights, and lots of love and snuggles.  We feel very blessed.
 
Now that I'm back at the Winery, there is a lot to look forward to here, too!  Harvest is around the corner - Alex Sokol Blosser and Winemaker Russ Rosner are taking daily trips into the vineyard to check brix levels, the winery is sparkling clean in anticipation of fermentation, and new French oak barrels are magically appearing almost daily.
 
There's a lot to be done and the hum of excitement is hard to miss.  Now is a great time to visit us - take a stroll through out walk-through vineyard and check out the ripe fruit, or enjoy a picnic on the deck overlooking wine country and enjoy one of these last lovely warm afternoons.  The Tasting Room is open 10am-4pm daily.  I'll look forward to greeting you now that I'm back!
 
 
 

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Our Lonely Crush Pad

Tuesday, October 11th 2011 by
Our crush pad is pretty lonely.  It's wondering when it will see some harvest action... so are we!  We're visiting our vineyards every day to taste the grapes for flavor and maturity, and the grapes are nearly to where we want them to be.  We are looking forward to beginning our 2011 harvest at the end of this week!


Labels: vineyard harvest
 

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Harvest Update!

Tuesday, October 18th 2011 by Alex Sokol Blosser, Co-President & Second Generation Winegrower

It's time for an official Harvest update! Harvest began officially last week, and now we have a day to breathe as we are not bringing in any fruit today.

The numbers: We are 32% done with harvest as of 10/18. Most years we are 100% done by now. Crazy, non? We have brought in 137 tons of fruit with that split between whites and Pinot Noir.

Highlights: Marci’s zucchini bread (of course!), Alison baked us a chocolate cake (again please but twice the size), Cody did up some cookies (my boys ate half of them I think), Blackberry Block North Pinot Noir tasted pretty good, and the biggest thing being the weather looks rain-free for another week or so!

Learnings: You don’t go to the weather as the weather comes to you and finds you and gives you a lot of wet willies.

So there we are folks! We are planning on being done with bringing in fruit by the end of the first week in November.

 

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Harvest Report 2011

Friday, November 11th 2011 by Susan Sokol Blosser, Founder

Here’s how an ideal grape harvest goes. Several weeks before harvest, the winemaker takes the crop estimates from the vineyard and works out a time line with approximate harvest times and fermentation space. Scheduling is done based on estimated crop size from each block or vineyard, estimated time of grape maturity, and amount of fermentation space available, keeping in mind the labor needed for harvest to proceed smoothly.

In this ideal scenario, the cool nights and warm days of Oregon’s Indian Summer bring the grapes to optimal maturity and the harvest advances over a matter of weeks. The harvested grapes match the crop estimates so that each vineyard block fits into its allocated fermentation space; the grapes are clean and don’t need much sorting; finding enough pickers is not a problem; and the flavor of the grapes is outstanding--they have matured in flavor at the same time as they reached optimum sugar.

Does a harvest like this ever happen? At Sokol Blosser, we have known years that fit this pattern, but the harvest of 2011 was not one of them. The long wet spring, late bloom, and cool summer were not too worrisome. When we first started, we wondered which season would be the most critical and long ago concluded that there was only one that really determined the quality of the vintage--the fall ripening season. What made the harvest of 2011 so difficult was the timing of the rain. We expected to start harvest about October 10, but between October 2 and 15, we had only one day without measurable rain. This not only postponed harvest but threatened to dilute the grapes. We kept hoping for the glorious Indian Summer but it never arrived. October 16 to 28 continually threatened rain but ended up being dry enough for us to get most of our grapes in. Sugar levels weren’t where we wanted them but the grapes had had enough “hang time” and we hoped for maturity of flavor and lower alcohol wines. Most of the blocks came in higher tonnage than estimated so that fermentation space was continually reshuffled, always at the last minute. The theme for the year was continuous improvisation, but the interval of dry weather helped us avert disaster and we look forward to good, flavorful wines from the 2011 vintage.
Labels: vineyard harvest
 

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