Weather
Today
Unlike
1999, when we had a cool growing season turned exceptional
by two months of exceptional weather, the 2000 growing
season was early and warm, giving hope for very good
quality from the beginning. Very good ripening conditions
in August and September were complemented by late
season dryness and moderate temperatures.
Harvest
began at Chehalem on September 28 with rainfall amounting
to only 1.13 inches during the late ripening period,
September 10-October 16th, and with an
average of 70.6 degree highs at our Stoller Vineyard
weather station. Perfect ripening for a cool climate.
Very
low rainfall from June through August of 0.94 inches
gave little disease pressure and a sponge-like soil
for the little rain that fell in harvest.
For
the first time
we exceeded 200 tons
processed, with Pinot noir
101 tons of the total.
Case
equivalent is 12,500; Pinot noir 6,400.

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Harvest 2000 Final
report, Nov. 8, 2000
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Oregon's
Harvest 2000. Oregon
has never before seen three great vintages in a row. Perhaps it's global
warming, perhaps it's smarter viticulture, perhaps it's luck!
We
are pleased to announce a Vintage 2000 equivalent
to 1998's, the currently released rich and full vintage,
and 1999's, a dense, firmly structured vintage that
will dominate the market over the next year.
A
Concentrated Vintage, in Several Aspects
Vintage
2000 was a year when Mother Nature gave us the steering
wheel, rather than insisting she drive. Early on we had generous
croploads, which we could carve down to perfect yield
levels, plus warm and dry growing and ripening seasons, which
allowed us to patiently await physiological and chemical
maturity. Sugars
and alcohols are moderate to high; acidity and structure
less than the firm 1999s; and uniformity of quality as
good as 1998.
We
made a record amount of great Pinot noir,
with new blocks at Stoller Vineyard and
more than prior puny yields from Ridgecrest
giving slightly more fruit to work with.
Still, yields were a low 2.31 tons/acre
for Pinot noir, with 2.50 and 2.55 for
Pinot gris and Chardonnay, respectively.
Pinot noir colors and flavors are deep
and rich. Whites will be very good, but
likely not as intense and firmly acidic
as 1999.
Logistics
were strained with a compact 28-day harvest.
The Pinot noir came in over a mere 17
days, which is intense considering the
varied elevations and sites of our three
estate vineyards. Eighteen hour days
were par for the course. Cheryl, Michael,
and I dictated the process while our
harvest crew of outstanding interns and
winemakers from New Zealand and Austria
provided great energy.
Signing
off to escape with the rest of the crew
for somewhere distantto sleep,
perchance to dream (but who could
hope for a 4th great Oregon
vintage?). |
| Harry |
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