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    165, route d'Uzès 30700 Saint Quentin la Poterie France Tel: +33(0)4 66.57.22.13 Fax: +33(0)4 66.03.10.19 info@lagramiere.com

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« March 2008 | Main | May 2008 »

April 30, 2008

Meet me in San Francisco?

Tomorrow morning at o-dark-thirty we'll be leaving for the Portland Indie Wine Festival!  I'm so looking forward to it!  We'll be there from Thursday through Sunday soaking up the Portland vibe and enjoying the discovery of new Oregon wine producers!

After that we'll be working our way down to the San Francisco - Bay Area to spend a few days with the Kermit Lynch sales people, presenting our wine at various wholesale accounts, and hoping that they like it!!!  The 2006 just arrived in Berkeley late last week, so it will be fun to spend some time hearing people's reactions to the wine.  Well, at least I hope it will!  I hope they like it!!!

Terroirsf_2 Since San Francisco is our old stomping ground, we can't wait to spend some time there!  I thought it might be worthwhile to set up a time and place where some of you who read the blog and who live in the Bay Area might like to come meet Matt and I for a drink!  I asked the Kermit Lynch sales staff where, and they came back with the new and oh so natural wine bar called Terroir!  Guilhaume Gerard who runs Terroir has gracious agreed to welcome all who wish to come on Tuesday May 13 from 6:30 on.  So if you read this blog and would like to taste La Gramière, we'd love to meet you there!

Terroir Natural Wine Merchant
1116 folsom street
san francisco, CA 94103
telephone_ (415) 558-9946
email_ info@terroirsf.com

April 28, 2008

Resurfacing from wedding madness~!

Molly_wedding_girlsSorry, I think, I'll be saying that a lot in the next few weeks, but I'm under the gun!  Last week it was finishing the guide and Molly's wedding, this week, the wedding behind us, it's still the guide, AND preparing for our trip to Portland for the Indie Wine Festival!  Yikes, Alice Feiring and Clark Smith have me shaking in my boots!  An oh, I have to finish the guide before I leave!  I don't think there are enough hours in the day, but I really felt I should check in and tell you what's going on here!

Had a wonderful time at the wedding.  From Wednesday on, I wasn't at my computer at all, except to print out programs! Family and friends were arriving non-stop and we were running around trying to finalize all of the last minute details of the big day! 

Tuesday, everyone came over to our house for an impromptu get together, we ordered pizzas and everyone helped "dispose"  (consume)  the samples I had opened that day to taste for the guide.  There were quite a few, but by the end of the evening there was hardly anything left! 
Pict0111
Wednesday we had a "winery visit and tasting"  here and then all went to Terroirs in Uzès for a great dinner on the Place aux Herbs, one of the first warm nights we've had!  I will admit I drank a bit too much wine and was a bit slow Thursday morning, but we were drinking Mas de Libian "Bout de Zan" and Rouge Garance Rosé, they both go down so easily!

Thursday we went to one of our favorite spots, called "Anne-Sophie  Huitres et Vignes"  it's a little old stone house out in the middle of the vineyards that Anne-Sophie restored and now serves ice-cold oysters and crisp white wine.  It's a great setting, casual and fun, and I love oysters!! 

Pict0124Friday was the wedding, non stop rush from morning 'till dawn.  Saturday, I collapsed, did nothing. 

Yesterday I racked some of the 2007 grenache which is tasting great!  Matt went to the vineyards and sprayed 500 (a biodynamic preparation good for the soil)  with a back pack sprayer.  Fun Fun Fun!Pict0131

Now I'm writing,  writing, writing, trying to finish before we leave, well you can see, I still found a way to procrastinate!Pict0126

April 16, 2008

Weed Badger in Action!

Weed Badger in Action!
Vidéo envoyée par lagramiere

Another angle. It can really get some of the big nasty weeds that are all but impossible to rip out by hand. The special support that the blacksmith made, wasn't strong enough and started to bend, so we had to ask him to solder on another, and much heavier piece of iron, now, I don't think anything could make it bend.

The moment we've all been waiting for!

Weedbadger syrah 2
Vidéo envoyée par lagramiere

Here it is in action! Yes, it's true, the Weed Badger is up and running. We're pretty happy with how it works, now Matt just has to practice! I think he'll get better at it as we go! There's also an automatic sensor that needs to be installed,which will make it much easier, but it is recommended that you learn to use the manual function first. That's fine, but if you screw up, this thing just rips the vine right out! We've only lost a few, but we certainly don't want to lose anymore. I have decided that Matt will be the official Weed Badger operator, I'm not sure I could handle it! Another video to follow...

April 14, 2008

Oops!

Here's a good one. 
Pict0052_2
Friday night I was relaxing with a cup of tea waiting for Matt to get home from a business trip to Zurich.  The phone rings and it's Mr. Paume, the man we bought our vineyards from and from who we are renting our white vineyards.  We had asked him to grind up our vine cuttings in all of our vineyard, we don't have a chipper and they're so expensive, it's just as easy to pay him to do it.  Well, he tells me while he was shredding the cuttings he noticed that we hadn't pruned one of the white vineyards, the clairette.  What?? I said.  Of course we have.  We finished pruning it about 3 weeks ago.  No, he said, you haven't.  I was completely perplexed.  We had spend 2 days freezing our butts off with my parents pruning it, attaching the new canes to the wires and everything.  I couldn't understand, I thought he'd lost his mind, and he thought I'd lost mine.  "I'll go look again, and call you right back," he said. 

Pict0099 Five minutes later he calls me back.  No, you haven't done it.  Holy shit,  we pruned someone else's vineyard that happens to be about the same size and right next to it.  Ugh.  Not only did we prune it, we plowed it and put our nifty organic fertilizer on it last weekend!  I said to him," Oh no!  Do you think he'll be angry? "  "No, he replied, I think he'll be thrilled.  But you should call him anyway. More importantly though, you've got to get out there and prune the Clairette right away."

So guess what we did on Saturday...??? 

Unbelievable, but, in the end I suppose it's better than harvesting the wrong vineyard, right?

April 08, 2008

Vine food and body building

Imag0037 We recently had our the soil of our various vineyards analyzed, and found that some of them were  out of balance and that we needed to give them a boost.  As you certainly remember we spread some horse manure this fall, but we decided that it probably wasn't quite enough.  While we were in Germany last fall for a wine fair, we met some other organic and bio-dynamic winemakers from the Loire -Domaine de Bellivière -who told us about a product that is approved for organic viticulture that they used and had very good results with.  We decided to give it a try.   This is definitely something we don't want to do often; number 1, because it costs a small fortune, and number 2 because we'd like to seed nitrogen fixing plants, and find other ways to build up the humus of our soil naturally without having to have to use these types of fertilizers, even though they are organic. 
Imag0036
The product is called Bio-Post Bouchon, and it is, according to the company's literature, it helps regenerate the microbial life of soil and also helps fix nitrogen.  It's full of micro-organisms and microbial flora that help to revitalize the soil, especially ones that have been weed-killed in the past like ours.  So we ordered 4 tonnes of it!  That's 4 pallets of forty 25 kilo bags.  Yippee!  What a way to spend your Saturday!  We asked the former owner of our vineyards, M. Paume, if we could borrow his spreader, and he of course agreed.  We told him we were fertilizing our vineyards (well, we left out the organic part)  and he thought that was a very good idea.  The only problem was our PTO shaft on our tractor wasn't long enough, so he had to loan us his tractor!  That was super nice!  We got it all set up, Matt driving his tractor (I didn't dare)!  So once we got the first load in the hopper, we realized that I would have to transport all of the bags of "fertilizer" up to the vineyards; otherwise, Matt would spend most of his time going back and forth from the vineyards to the hangar to fill up. 

Imag0040 What a great job.  First filling the back of the car with these 50-pound bags of fertilizer and then unloading them up at each vineyard.  Then Matt would slit them open, lift them up chest high, and dump them into the spreader.  By the end of the day we figured I had moved 4 metric tons, twice and Matt once!  Now that's a great way to get in shape for summer. 

Today it's gently raining on our newly spread soil amendment (I hate the word fertilizer!) and this weekend we are planning on using the Weed Badger to work it into the soil.  Though they are predicting rain all week, so it may be too wet in the vineyards for the Weed Badger!  But we'll never complain about rain here, well at least not spring rain, this winter's rainfall is again far below average, AGAIN, so we are hoping to get more before it gets too hot.

April 02, 2008

Getting Certified

Bio_label_3Since we bought our vineyards in late 2004 we have farmed them organically using only copper and sulfur in the vineyards along with many biodynamic preparations such as infusions of nettles, horsetail, willow and other natural remedies.  We didn't apply for organic certification though,  at the time it seemed unnecessary; for us, farming organically was a life choice, not some fashionable band wagon we were trying to jump on.  Recently though, we've felt differently.  More and more it is apparent to us that we need to have that certification, even if we never put the logo on our label, we must be able to say that we are certified organic. 

The certification process takes 3 years.  The first year you can't say anything on your label or anywhere in your literature about organic conversion.  The second and third years you are allowed to say that your wine is made with grapes that are "in organic conversion" and finally after the third full year you can be organically certified.  Currently in France there is only a certification for "organically grown grapes" and not organic wine or winemaking, that is changing though and we will soon be able to be certified in both, grape growing and winemaking.

It was Martin Kössler our German importer that first asked us to go ahead with the organic certification, he is a big proponent  of organic and biodynamic wines and is planning a convention of sorts in 2009 and wanted us to be a part of it.  Martin felt though, that if we were to participate, we needed the certification, and I agree.  It's too easy to say you're organic and/or biodynamic and then say that you're not certified because you haven't taken the time or because you don't believe in the label, more and more I truly believe that it's an important process that needs to be supported by all farmers who refuse to use chemicals in their fields. 

Pict0043 We met with the agent from Ecocert who will oversee our conversion.  First we visited each parcel (we have 6) he looked at the surrounding vineyards, for potential contaminations from neighbors, looked at the soil, at the weeds growing in our vineyards and at the general state of our vines.  He asked us some questions and finally I realized that he was trying to find out if we were earnest, trying to see if we were hiding anything and wanted simply to be certified without really believing in the process.  Of course in the end it was pretty easy to see that since we have all kinds of weeds and other interesting plants growing in our vineyards, that we were pretty serious about organics.  We then had to take him to the place where we store our tractor so that he could make a list of any chemical products that we might still have in reserve before going organic.  We showed him the half bag of sulfur and the half bag of copper that was left over from last year, both of which are allowed in organic agriculture, and he seemed content that we were on the up and up. 
Pict0059
So we signed a bunch of papers, he gave us a three ring binder in which we now have to keep track of   all of the products we purchase for use in the vineyards etc.  We are on the way to being certified organic grape growers, and as soon as we can be certified for winemaking we will be too.  There's another good one.  There are lots and lots of people out there who grow their grapes organically, then when it comes to winemaking will put anything and everything into the vat including GMO yeasts, enzymes, vitamins... all sorts of industrially produced things.  That seems completely incomprehensible to me.  Our one caveat is SO2,  which is used as a preservative in wine,  I'm not willing to give it up, I've tasted too many funky,  bizarre, unstable wines recently to go 100% SO2 free.   We don't use a lot, and I'm sure could use even less, but we're just not ready to go there quite yet.