The choir is often off-key.originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
One can't even preach to the choir around here safely.
originally posted by Florida Jim:
Paraphrasing from Kevin Harvey at Rhys . . .
Dirt is the most important element in wine grape growing. Climate, aspect, clone, etc. are factors but dirt is paramount.
I may have mentioned previously that he has one vineyard that is on one side of the San Andreas Fault and one on the other. They are less than a football field apart and they make noticeably different pinots. (Sounds like Burgundy.)
This is probably not a an extraordinary point of view. But what impressed me about it is the amount of time and money that they have spent trying to figure this out.
No stone left unturned, if you will.
Best, Jim
originally posted by Florida Jim:
Paraphrasing from Kevin Harvey at Rhys . . .
Dirt is the most important element in wine grape growing. Climate, aspect, clone, etc. are factors but dirt is paramount.
I may have mentioned previously that he has one vineyard that is on one side of the San Andreas Fault and one on the other. They are less than a football field apart and they make noticeably different pinots. (Sounds like Burgundy.)
This is probably not a an extraordinary point of view. But what impressed me about it is the amount of time and money that they have spent trying to figure this out.
No stone left unturned, if you will.
Best, Jim
Both.originally posted by MarkS:
originally posted by Florida Jim:
Paraphrasing from Kevin Harvey at Rhys . . .
Dirt is the most important element in wine grape growing. Climate, aspect, clone, etc. are factors but dirt is paramount.
I may have mentioned previously that he has one vineyard that is on one side of the San Andreas Fault and one on the other. They are less than a football field apart and they make noticeably different pinots. (Sounds like Burgundy.)
This is probably not a an extraordinary point of view. But what impressed me about it is the amount of time and money that they have spent trying to figure this out.
No stone left unturned, if you will.
Best, Jim
Dirt...or rocks? I thought Kevin was looking more at the geology underneath the soil?
'Can't say with certainty but Kevin made a point of saying the only distinction was soil.originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
originally posted by Florida Jim:
Paraphrasing from Kevin Harvey at Rhys . . .
Dirt is the most important element in wine grape growing. Climate, aspect, clone, etc. are factors but dirt is paramount.
I may have mentioned previously that he has one vineyard that is on one side of the San Andreas Fault and one on the other. They are less than a football field apart and they make noticeably different pinots. (Sounds like Burgundy.)
This is probably not a an extraordinary point of view. But what impressed me about it is the amount of time and money that they have spent trying to figure this out.
No stone left unturned, if you will.
Best, Jim
Are the exposures and slopes of the two Pinot sites identical?
originally posted by Brézème:
...dreadlocks and a Che Guevara T-shirt...
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
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Too punk for me. Maybe Pcapp could pull it off.originally posted by kirk wallace:
Oh....At first, I thought you meant this beauty.
originally posted by Brézème:
Not long ago one of the new natural cool kids with dreadlocks and a Che Guevara tshirt explained me : Terroir is sooooo "petit bourgeois"...
9 posts is a maximum for such a subject.
I've always wanted to whip out a batch of cli-CHE shirts myself...originally posted by SFJoe:
originally posted by Brézème:
...dreadlocks and a Che Guevara T-shirt...
I've had an itch lately to have Kościuszko shirts made up. He was sort of the Enlightenment Che.