wow. reading the various comments above makes me begin to understand the monkey's perspective far better.
there were some 30 odd cases of pre-2000 donnhoff in the fatcave when i flew it from the frozen north out to the us. i drink and report on those. it would appear that the monkey and i are drinking very different wines.
when i mention the 99% figure, i meant that as far as i can tell, shipping by sea has a permanent affect on the wine. for most purposes, i may as well have written 100%. side by side comparisons between bottles i've flown out and bottles that have been carefully shipped here have shown a consistent pattern of difference that is far from subtle. (it also isn't barometrics, since the opinion is based on side by side comparisons.) i was also going to write, "it is worst in syrah," but then i realized that it's just that my vague dislike for rhone wines has made me more willing to sacrifice them for these kinds of experiments (and there have been a lot of these, because i can never quite get over how large the differences are).
i was also going to write "it's worse in reds," but then i pondered all this.
fwiw, this doesn't mean that i advocate flying out all wine. the world has enough problems. life is full of trade offs, and that's how i've viewed the problem of blurry wine these past few years. most of the time, absent a comparison, the blurriness is not something that bothers or even occurs to me.
it isn't all bad either -- my experience is that the 99 donnhoffs have firmed up in the past couple of years. that firming happened earlier in the blurry/chunky bottles i bought here. which meant that the "worse" bottles were actually "better" to drink. go figure.
thanks to all for the helpful data, btw.
fb.