Taking Notice of Natural

Tuesday, August 7, 2012 by Jeffrey Weissler

From the Oregon Wine Press, August 1, 2012

Several years ago, I discovered that rockin’ wine often comes from sustainably farmed grapes. With a new-found passion for natural wine, I wanted to learn more and dig deeper. Through research — and a bottle or two — I have unearthed the following conclusions:

1. Diversity on the farm and a strong immune system go hand and hand.

2. Through observation, the farmer discovers the assets of his farm and, as a result, builds a growing, evolving, living relationship with the land. The depth of that relationship supports the ongoing health of the farm.

3. The farmer/farm relationship is what can allow the farmer to not put round pegs in square holes when making choices. This supports a set of dominoes which keep the farm’s immune system strong. The easier things fit together, the less stress on the system, the more naturally the whole system works.

4. When you take, you must give back. That’s what makes any relationship work well and sustainably. If you remove the natural vitality from the soil (because it’s been absorbed by the products harvested), then that vitality needs to be given back. Indigenous cover crops and composting — created ideally from materials on the farm — are a couple ways to accomplish this.

5. Synthetic chemicals used in farming can help in the short term but come with side effects, including nutrient and diversity depletion. Think of taking medicine for an ailment and how it affects your system, especially if you take it long-term. How do you support your overall health, and what might you do to balance or counteract the side effects of taking medicine both short and long-term.

6. Agriculture doesn’t exist in nature; its roots go back approximately 10,000 years. When a farmer takes away the natural diversity, a lot of conscious work is required to reinvigorate the soil and the environment with diversity and vitality.

7. Farm as if it were 1850. Huh? Use what’s on the farm to support the farm. Think of it like a closed loop system. If you want to build a house or wall, where does the wood and stone come from? The idea is to create a closed loop system, where the nutrients and resources needed to nourish that system come from within that system.

A commitment to move in these directions can lead to sustainability defined as: leaving the land healthier than it was before farming; passing a healthier place on to our kids and their kids; and minimizing the pull of resources from outside the farm.

Specific practices include animals on the farm, biodiversity, Biodynamic farming, energy conversation, family farming, good worker policies, natural winemaking, packaging conservation, polyculture (growing or raising different plants and animals on the same land) and water conservation.

Cheers to the wineries walking the talk while putting in the bottle wines that rock. Luckily for us here in Oregon, this trend is becoming more the norm and less of an exception.

Jeffrey Weissler writes about natural and organic wine on his blog, ConsciousWine.com. Originally from New York, Weissler now lives in Portland, via Ashland.

In Demystifying Natural Wine, In The News, Jeff's Blog, Natural Winemaking, Sustainable Practices | Tagged with , , ,

From On the Way to Somewhere Else, by Skip Walter

Posted on May 21, 2012

On a dreary Seattle day, an intriguing invitation from Dominio IV showed up in my inbox to come plant a grape vine labyrinth near Mosier, OR at their Three Sleeps Vineyard. I checked my calendar and I had nothing planned for that day.  It has been way too long since I’d been to Oregon Wine Country so this was a great excuse to have another authentic experience for my wine geek education. I usually try to get down to their McMinnville winery a couple of times a year to see what Patrick Reuter is innovating around the making of fine wine. I also try to arrange to help out in the tasting room or with the fall crush.  However, it has been over a year since I’ve made time to visit my favorite wine making family.  While I’ve been hearing for years about their biodynamic vineyard in the Columbia Gorge, I hadn’t managed to make my way to the property. Clearly, now was the time to go learn some more about fine wine growing.

Wiltshire Labyrinth

Many moons ago when we toured England as a family, our children insisted that we go visit the labyrinth in Wiltshire, England near Stonehenge.  We were fascinated with the distinction between a labyrinth and a maze.  A maze is a complex puzzle while a labyrinth has only a single non-branching path which leads to the center.  We enjoyed walking through the labyrinth and the kids wished that there was one of these closer to home in Seattle, WA.

Patrick Reuter was so fascinated with the experience of labyrinths that he encountered while working at different wineries in Europe, that he chose the labyrinth as the symbol for Dominio IV wines. For ten years, Patrick has tried to convince his co-owner and wife, Leigh Bartholomew, to let him plant a labyrinth on their vineyard property.  Leigh being an amazing vineyard manager at Archery Summit, has resisted because she dislikes driving a tractor in circles through rows of vines.  Maybe one day we’ll all find the real story as to why she relented and decided to support Patrick’s dream of having a labyrinth of grape vines that friends of the winery can come experience the journey to the center.

Three Sleeps Bed and Breakfast

Glenn and Liz Bartholomew who live on the property and run the Three Sleeps Bed and Breakfast along with other family members laid out and prepared the ground for twenty of us to come do the “shape planting.” [Note:  As a way to remember the taste of his wines, Patrick invented something he calls "shape tasting."] Glenn had prepared all of the irrigation lines and then augered all the holes for the vines. The rest of the family pounded in the bamboo stakes into the planting holes to help guide the upward spreading of the grape vine.

Patrick Reuter describing the labyrinth layout

We all gathered on the front porch of the Bartholomew’s home where Patrick shared his vision and philosophy for the labyrinth. He described the difference between a maze and a labyrinth and his fondest hope that these vines would last 100 years and provide opportunities for thousands to make the spiritual journey of the labyrinth. From the porch we could see the primary east/west line of the concentric circles. His design challenge was how to lay out the labyrinth so that it would be both an interesting walk and allow the farming and irrigation of the vines to occur.

Mt Adams rising about Three Sleeps Vineyard

From his winemaker’s view, he is planting an interesting mix of Tempranillo (the majority of the grapes planted on the rest of the property), Syrah, Cabernet Franc, Malbec and Petite Verdot. His goal is to produce a “field blend” in a couple of barrels that will be available to wine club members and those who journey through the labyrinth. What we are planting today will be harvested in three years and then take two to three years to age before being released. Once again I am reminded of the long range thinking that one has to do in the wine industry – what we do today won’t be available for the market for at least five years.

Leigh Bartholomew on Shape Planting

Leigh then took over to move us from the visionary spiritual to the pragmatics of how we would plant the vines. We moved down to the labyrinth and Leigh went through a detailed explanation and show and tell of how to plant. First, we put some all natural rock phosphate fertilizer on the mound of dirt piled on the side of the hole. She explained that we needed to mix this in with the dirt and put this in the hole first followed by a couple of inches of dirt so that the fertilizer didn’t “burn” the root structure. Ideally, you wanted to have about a fist of root stem above ground right next to the bamboo shoot pole. With the one example we were now educated to go plant our way around the circular rows. I love the process of see one, do one, teach one approach to experiential learning.

Of course I had to encourage Patrick to plant lots more Cabernet Franc which has become my favorite speciality varietal.  I lovingly planted about ten Cab Franc vines with focused intentionality so that they would thrive and Patrick would see the light to plant even more in the future. In addition to the Cab Franc I was able to plant some Petite Verdot and Tempranillo varietals before all of the vines were in their respective holes.  It is amazing how quickly what seems like a forever task is finished with 25 motivated wine lovers.

Many hands makes fast shape planting

As the planting was winding down, I asked Patrick how the journey would flow through the labyrinth vineyard. In his wonderful way, Patrick started with “I’m not sure.  Now that all the vines are in, I have to figure out how to set up a symbol system to guide the flow through these open spaces we have to leave for the tractors. I thought about putting stone markers where people need to turn, but they are so heavyweight for the vineyard.  The tractors will run over them and drive them into the ground compacting the root systems.”

Before we start the labyrinth grape vine planting

I immediately lept to a technical solution to the problem laughing at myself the whole time that I shared it with Patrick.  “Look we could do a quick labyrinth navigation app.  All you would have to do is get one of those augmented GPS transmitters like wheat farmers use to precisely plant a field.  Then the user could look at the app and navigate their way through the vineyard.”

Neither of us could stop laughing at the thought of wine lovers looking to get back to nature and do something spiritual in the vineyard looking at their iPhone the whole time.  Some things are just so wrong.

The planted labyrinth from the existing vineyard

Throughout the afternoon, Patrick and Leigh’s two young boys and a friend were navigating the tall grasses within the maze as they acted out their fantasies of hunters looking to prey on these farmers planting their vines. The lyrics of lions and tigers and bears from Wizard of Oz kept running through my head.

The hunters ready to soak the planters.

After cleaning up a little, we retired to the front porch to have some tacos, fresh vegetables and of course, Dominio IV wines. The Bartholomews know how to put on a fresh food spread. We started with the 2011 Viognier to accompany the chips and salsa and then moved through a progression of reds – Pinot Noir, Syrah, Syrah-Tempranillo blends, and finally a Tempranillo.

As the evening wound down and the labyrinth planters began to drift off, Patrick suggested that Jeff Weissler of Conscious Wine and I chat a bit. Jeff and I had exchanged emails a couple of months back after I’d written the blog post on Shape Tasting and Patrick pointed me to Jeff’s videos on Shape Tasting with Patrick. We did the “do you know” routine to establish our wine geek credentials. We have many mutual friends on our respective journeys including Bill and Barb Steele of Cowhorn Winery, Alan York, Paul Dolan, and the Benzigers.

Jeff is doing some interesting work promoting his four principles and twelve practices of fine wine making.  His focus is on figuring out how to rate wineries over the long term rather than myopically only pay attention to a particular bottle of wine from a particular vintage. I look forward to many great interactions in the future with Jeff as he helps all of us be intentional in what we look for in fine wines and fine wine growers. Jeff posted his video of the labyrinth planting earlier today.

Very early stage grape cluster growth

With lots of hugs for old friends and new wine fellow travellers it was time to head back up the road to Bainbridge Island.

As I headed out from the peace and aliveness of Three Sleeps Vineyard, I once again reflected on Brian Doyle’s insightful quotes from  The Grail:  A Year Ambling and Shambling through an Oregon Vineyard in pursuit of the best pinot noir wine in the Whole Wide World about fine wine growing:

“Grapevines are amazing life forms when you think about it, they plunge their fingers a hundred feet down into the rocky soil, they can live for hundreds of years, they fend off all sorts of insect attacks, and they have been working with human beings for so long, thousands and thousands of years, that you wonder sometimes who cultivates who, you know what I mean?  Are people manipulating and taking advantage of grape vines, or are grape vines deftly using human beings to take over the world?

“On my way back uphill to my car I remember what Jesse told me once, that each vine produces enough grapes to make about three-fourths of a bottle of wine, and I chew on the idea that three-fourths of a bottle of excellent wine is probably just the right amount necessary for two or three people to start telling stories fast and furious,so that each of the vines I pass is pregnant with stories, some of which were never born into the world before, and this idea makes me happy also, so by the time I get to the town where I am supposed to give a talk I am cheerful as a chipmunk.

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