The final days leading up to harvest were as beautiful as the 
day is long. Daytime temperatures were warm to moderate with cool night-time 
patterns and most importantly, dry. Harvest began as it always does, in earnest, 
on Sunday, October 17th. We enjoyed sharing these first days of harvest with 
some special friends. Thank you for making the journey to see Dena and 
Ernie.
 
Specifically, Ernie had estimated about 72.98 tons of fruit for 
the year. That is 717,837 clusters of grapes with wings removed weighing in at 
about 92.3 grams. That averages about 5 clusters per pound, and is a little 
smaller than an "average" yield of 4 clusters per pound. Yeah, he tracks things 
at that level. Where does he find the time... 
 
The final result came in just under estimate at 65.23 tons, or 
89.4% of estimate - statistically significant, but irrelevant. All blocks were 
harvested, and we lost very little fruit to Botrytis aka "Bunch Rot." At the end 
of the day however, we did determine that our winged Pinot Noir "connoisseurs" 
had taken an early and "long" position in our surrounding forests. This was one 
of those years where you feed the birds.
 
The challenge we faced was bringing in 65 tons in short order. 
While the harvest window looked really nice, it was not going to last forever. 
There is a funny story about someone who made a substantial sum in the stock 
market. He was asked how he did it; what was his "secret?" He replied "I sold 
too soon!"
 
And so it was as harvest began. People wanted to pick, but they 
thought it was too soon. The sugars were rising (Brix) and the acids were 
falling. The planets were beginning to align. The cold 2010 vintage was being 
redeemed! The weather was stunning and Ernie understood the temptation to wait. 
But Ernie has lived through the "Dot.Com" bust, and the thought of waiting was 
never seriously considered. He learned the hard way that those "gains" are not 
yours until you bring them home. 
 
So we picked grapes like it was going to rain tomorrow, and 
eventually it did. Our last big Pinot Noir push was on Saturday, October 23rd. 
Ernie was also picking fruit for not only our best customer, but our only 
customer, Cristom. Knowing this was to be the last best day of harvest, Ernie 
made the call, and a long-time friend came through with 14 additional picking 
bins. Game on!
 
Logistics is something that Ernie takes seriously. That fateful 
day, he was faced with harvesting about 20 tons of Pinot Noir (that is 2,000 
buckets) with 36 pickers, 50 picking bins, 74 harvest buckets and 2 tractor 
trailer combinations that held 3 picking bins each. This was planned to be our 
biggest harvest day ever, if we could beat the rains. Harvest began at 7:30 and 
covered the expanse of the vineyard, picking the final blocks that needed all 
the growing season they could get.
 
All day was gray and overcast. Temperatures were in the upper 
40s with momentary sunbreaks and a light breeze. The threat of rain hung in the 
air with the potential of a deluge at any moment. Ernie thought about the 
Hindenburg. He had to take a couple calls throughout the day and the crew 
thought he was calling in favors for more time. Ernie did not dispel the myth. 
 
With this number of pickers, the harvest bins filled quickly. 
Each bin holds about 36 buckets of hand harvested Pinot Noir. In other words, 
when each person in the picking crew finishes a bucket, that fills a picking 
bin. As each trailer filled, Ernie would make a run to the winery to R & R 
(Remove and Reload) another 3 bins. Every trip to the winery was headed west 
where the storm clouds were gathering and the front was building energy. It was 
going to rain, but not yet.
 
It isn't over until its over. As we watched the sky to the west 
grow darker and closer, we could see the rate of the pickers decrease. For the 
uninitiated, hand harvesting grapes is very hard work; it had been 7 hours. We 
stayed true to the task at hand and kept moving. The feeling of knowing you are 
cheating the gods is a very powerful aphrodisiac. 
 
Then something wonderful happened. We ran out of bins and we 
ran out of grapes to pick. And it started to rain as if on cue. The time was 
2:30 pm and we had our harvest bins out of the field and covered with lids. 
Victory, snatched from the jaws of defeat! It continued to rain for the next 24 
hours and we logged 2.23 inches of rain. Trust us, in agriculture it is better 
to be lucky than good!
 
In the winery, the harvest strategy has been validated. As 
noted earlier in the Julian Calendar, we look for Brix (fermentable sugars) and 
pH (measure of acidity) to be in the acceptable range to ferment grapes into 
wine. Our Pinot Noir Brix ran the range of 20 to 22. This will translate into a 
very acceptable final alcohol of around 12.5% to 13.5%. So far, so 
good.
 
The acids in the grapes are primarily Tartaric and Malic, and 
we had plenty of acid. We will convert the Malic acid to Lactic over a long 
winter's respite. But the tartaric acid will be with us in the final wine. Look 
for very firm to trenchant acidity to provide balance, delineation, cut and 
length to the finished wines. But wait, it gets better.
 
We are winegrowers. Wine is about aroma, flavor, balance and 
pleasure. Despite the cool growing season, we did have relatively long hang 
time. Our benchmark for Pinot Noir aromas and flavors to develop here in the 
Willamette Valley is 105 days from flowering to harvest, and we met that mark on 
October 12th. Tasting the berries in the field before harvest revealed a 
pleasant surprise, the flavors in the skins had developed earlier than we had 
calculated. Add to that 5-10 extra days of outstanding, dry weather, and you 
have the 2010 Oregon Pinot Noir harvest.
 
A final note, lest we forget the Syrah and Viogner. Once again 
Ernie stuck to his guns and waited into November to harvest his 4 clones of cool 
climate Syrah and the Viognier. Is this guy a genius, or was he just getting 
really tired? The Syrah again this year has the tell tale aromas of white pepper 
and spice. The Viognier was pressed whole cluster and the resulting juice 
smelled of apricots, white nectarines and baking spice. 
 
We overcame a minor set-back mid-way through Okto-vember. But 
like much of the country, we were able to figure out how to reset most of our 
chronographs. The rest of the work now includes punch down of the caps in the 
fermenters and then filling barrels for a long winter's rest. The wine that is, 
we need to focus on the promise of the 2009 vintage that awaits our blending 
selections and bottling in the new year.
 
Lastly, the numbers. Not much changed in the last 16 days of 
October.
 
Our highest high was 76.0 and our lowest high was 
73.9. Our lowest low was above the frost point at 35.7 and our highest low was 
36.4 degrees Fahrenheit. We have accumulated 6 more degree days, for a 2010 
growing season total of 1,722 degree days. Our heretofore coldest vintage, 
2007, accumulated 1,890 degree days. The rainfall through the 31st of October 
was 6.22 inches and over 2 inches of that came in the afternoon after we 
finished harvest!