That's some good shit right there.sustainability is rarely a subject of discussion. SO2, carbonic maceration, filtration, amphoras, Jules Chauvet, even Che Guevara are much more fashionable than fossil fuel consumption or carbon footprint in the present natural wine discussion
I was surprised he was talking about other wine makers, and not merely the blogosphere.originally posted by Thor:
That's some good shit right there.sustainability is rarely a subject of discussion. SO2, carbonic maceration, filtration, amphoras, Jules Chauvet, even Che Guevara are much more fashionable than fossil fuel consumption or carbon footprint in the present natural wine discussion
originally posted by Cory Cartwright:
It was my pleasure. The only I thought was missing (besides more winemakers, of course) was people doing single bottles of wine they were excited about.
originally posted by VLM:
Oh, it's way beyond that now. We must all take a stance.
originally posted by John Ritchie:
I really value Eric's insights and definitely think he brings up important issues, but I also hope the discussion about fossil fuels doesn't go too far down the path into "locavore"-territory.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa: I rent cars, take taxis, ride on airplanes, eat red meat and wear leather... So, unless we are willing to reform our entire lifestyles...
Maybe we should start with shipping heavy glass bottles all over the world by trains, planes, ships, and autombiles.It's more about the overall picture, what is waste/excessive, etc.
Well said. I was going to say something along the lines of, I guess the Venn diagram of people who favor traditional winemaking and people who give a shit about their so-called "carbon footprints" have a substantial overlap, but I'm exclusively in the former camp, non-overlapping.originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
Meine dois centimesEric drove a Mack truck through my presumption that natural wines had lower carbon footprints than regular. But the truth is that I am drawn to natural wines more for the esthetics than the ethics. The romantic ideals of purity and honesty. Would I drink them as a matter of principle if they tasted worse? I think not. I rent cars, take taxis, ride on airplanes, eat red meat and wear leather. Does that make me a hypocrite? Are natural winemakers who drive cars and take trains and board planes to come to the US to market their wines hypocrites? Are their holier-than-thou importers who write eloquent books and manifestos hypocrites also? Are we all hypocrites on Ego Disorder? Each of us has to draw a line in the sand somewhere, and I'm not sure that being judgmental about where others draw theirs is the way to go, even if it's fun to set up a soapbox in a sandbox (I'm talking about bloody amateurs; Eric has earned the right to rage against the machine).
Mechanized plowing would be OK if the tractors were electric and the energy came from hydroelectric or eolic sources. So, unless we are willing to reform our entire lifestyles, we should do more to fight oil-based energy and its hideous spills instead of parsing the carbon footprints of our natural wines.