Jeff Grossman
Jeff Grossman
So, with everyplace getting warmer, we've seen a fizz industry develop in southern England. How about America: has anybody seen an uptick in the quality of, say, wines from Virginia?
originally posted by Rahsaan:
I don't think cool weather is what was holding back the wines from Virginia all these years.
originally posted by Rahsaan:
I don't think cool weather is what was holding back the wines from Virginia all these years.
originally posted by mark e:
originally posted by Rahsaan:
I don't think cool weather is what was holding back the wines from Virginia all these years.
On the contrary, it is generally too hot and far too humid to grow vinifera with any success without massive chemical inputs (if you have been there you'd know there isn't just an issue with downy mildew and rot but mind-boggling insect pressure). So southern England makes perfect sense (and, surprise, grapes - though mainly hybrids - can ripen in southern Norway) with global warming.
Climate Change 21st C: "Making Greenland green again"originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Got it. I'll look for Cuvee Greenland.
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
My daughter and son-in-law live in London and are avid wine enthusiasts/travelers. They are confident that the cyclical warm trend at this time will lead to England having wine comparable to the fine regions of France.
Time will tell.
. . . . . Pete
originally posted by MLipton:
Climate Change 21st C: "Making Greenland green again"originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Got it. I'll look for Cuvee Greenland.
Mark Lipton
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
My daughter and son-in-law live in London and are avid wine enthusiasts/travelers. They are confident that the cyclical warm trend at this time will lead to England having wine comparable to the fine regions of France.
Time will tell.
. . . . . Pete
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
My daughter and son-in-law live in London and are avid wine enthusiasts/travelers. They are confident that the cyclical warm trend at this time will lead to England having wine comparable to the fine regions of France.
Time will tell.
. . . . . Pete
If they actually used the nonsense, political term "cyclical warm trend" instead of the scientific consensus of man made climate change, then I'd posit that their opinions are pretty much worthless.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
My daughter and son-in-law live in London and are avid wine enthusiasts/travelers. They are confident that the cyclical warm trend at this time will lead to England having wine comparable to the fine regions of France.
Time will tell.
. . . . . Pete
If they actually used the nonsense, political term "cyclical warm trend" instead of the scientific consensus of man made climate change, then I'd posit that their opinions are pretty much worthless.
Good catch. There are no known cyclical trends that could conceivably be responsible for what we have seen in the last 20 years, more so in the last 10 and pretty intensely in the last five. Lets hope this was just a slip of the keyboard.
originally posted by Karen Goetz:
Hmmm...."opportunities" of climate changeI'm all for good wine in new places. I get the conceit (literary, not personal): a story of beneficial perceptions (possibly entertaining/distracting) of some of the changes in the world today. But these things are connected. I know that environmental, social, cultural and political challenges are severe and it is difficult for us to take it in without feeling like our hearts are caving in. I'm writing from northern California where a pall of unsafe/unhealthy air is sitting over the land. While places all around me, further away so far, burn up.
I find it hard to accept the premise of "benefits" of climate change for any reason when so many plant and animal species are being winked out. And microorganisms.
To me, to seek to identify a nice niche within a larger reality that is ugly for everybody is a soporific. It puts us all to sleep. If Greenland and England grow vast quantities of grenache it means social upheaval and political disorder everywhere has already happened. And that's just for humans. The biological systems that we rely on (unwittingly, unfortunately) will have become permanently disturbed and unreliable.
I'm so sad about our human tendency to isolate the variable and be entranced by its intricacies. As long as that "isolated" fact pertains to our desires. As though that is real life. That isolation of ideas and possession of things as if that grants us control over them.
I'm hoping for a different perspective.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
I take threads about growning wine in Greenland to be gallows humor, to which I've never objected.
originally posted by Karen Goetz:
Hmmm...."opportunities" of climate changeI'm all for good wine in new places. ....
I'm hoping for a different perspective.