Handcrafted Artisan Wines

                  Black Cordon Vineyards
                                             -
Wines of Balance and
Complexity -

                                                                                           Napa Valley


   Vineyards
                                                                                                           Ritchie Vineyard - Russian River Valley
                                                                                                                         Very Old Vine Chardonnay
Vineyard Care and Practices

Hands-on, detail intensive winemaking begins in the vineyard. In fact, the hands-on individual care that we give each vine is the most important factor in making a balanced, complex, flavorful wine. To achieve this goal we need to make certain that every cluster of grapes and every grape on every cluster is equally ripe and perfectly healthy. This is not easy. To achieve this we start with the overall vineyard, divide it into blocks, focus on rows and then get hands-on with each and every vine. Here is what we do:

From budburst, in the spring and throughout the summer, we position every shoot on each vine by hand so that they are all growing parallel to each other in their proper location. This leads to consistent sun exposure for all of the grapes throughout the season.  In the spring we remove the excess shoots on the vine; we only want eight on each cordon. Just before the grapes turn color, known as veraison, we remove excess leaves and lateral growth down below the grape clusters so that every cluster will have optimum light exposure and air circulation. Shortly after veraison, we thin the crop to ensure that each vine has only as much fruit as it can fully ripen in that season. If any clusters are lagging behind in color change, they will lag behind in ripeness, so we remove them for the benefit of the other grapes. As the season progresses, we hand position the clusters and remove some clusters in order to assure that none of the bunches are touching or crowding each other. Touching leads to shading and therefore uneven ripening. We also remove individual grapes from each bunch if they are immature, damaged, or not ripening at the same pace as the other grapes.

Irrigation is a separate story of its own. Irrigation is an art. Too much, too little, when to stress the vines, when not to, and the timing of it is all vital. Irrigation is monitored right down to every individual vine so that we can achieve equal ripeness and maximum flavor development throughout the vineyard.

At harvest, the grapes are gently handled and gently clipped from the vine and gently placed in a bin for transport to the winery. We don't want to dent or break any grapes as this will lead to oxidation flavors in the wine. We also do our harvesting at night when it's cooler and the grapes have a better balance of sugar and acidity.

From the moment that the harvest is complete, we begin preparing the vineyard ground and the vines for a well-deserved rest. A natural, organic, nitrogen-rich cover crop is planted between the rows to replenish the soil. The vines are tended to, one by one; some are replaced, some are re-trellised and all are hand-pruned for optimum growth in the following season.
Vineyards and Grape Sources


Cabernet Sauvignon

Our Home Vineyard is, literally, surrounding our home. It is located in the foothills of the Mayacamas Mountains; the mountains that form the western border of the Napa Valley. The vineyard straddles the line between the Oak Knoll District and the Mount Veeder appellation just southwest of Yountville. The BCV Home Vineyard vines are predominantly Cabernet Sauvignon, but there are also small blocks of Cabernet Franc, and Petit Verdot.

For diversity of fruit and complexity in the wine we farm our ha
nd picked blocks in several vineyards running the length of Napa Valley. We do this intentionally so that we can have greater depth and complexity in our final bottled wine. Our vineyards run the length of the valley. Tourmaline Vineyard is located in Coombsville in the cool south which gives us inky dark, structured wine, Flat Rock Vineyard on State Lane in Yountville - a tenderloin strip of Cabernet, Stagecoach - a famous vineyard for red varietals in the mountains,  Winfield Vineyard in Calistoga at the top of the valley - a hot Cabernet loving area producing wines of deep Napa fruit, and Black Cordon Vineyard in the Mount Veeder/Oak Knoll appellation in the foothills of the Mayacamas Mountains - which gives us deep, dark, spicy, herb tinged wine.

As you can see we use a blend of hillside grapes for power and structure, and valley floor grapes, from the tenderloin of cabernet territory, for complexity and density of flavor. I've always loved mountain cabernets and valley floor cabernets equally well for different reasons, but it was always my thought to combine the best attributes of both into one wine.


Chardonnay

Our belief is that the best chardonnay grapes come from the cooler growing areas; that is why we make our chardonnay  wines from grapes grown in the Russian River appellation, and the Sonoma Coast appellation, just west of Napa Valley and closer to the cooling effects of the Pacific Ocean. Yields are naturally very low in this area and the grapes struggle to ripen. This leads to intense flavors and harmonious balance of acidity and fruit.

Ritchie Vineyard

Our Russian River  Chardonnay is made from grapes that come from a jewel of a vineyard called the Kent Ritchie Vineyard. It is our opinion that this is one of the top three Chardonnay vineyards in California and we have waited to produce a BCV Chardonnay until we could secure grapes from a vineyard of this caliber. The fact is, it was always our first choice but it was extremely difficult securing this fruit. You'll see in the marketplace that Kent Ritchie Chardonnay is only bottled by the very top Chardonnay producers who have track records for excellence. We are very flattered that Kent Ritchie believes in us, and our consultant winemaker Paul Hobbs, enough to let us join the ranks of these premier Chardonnay producers. Of note, however, is that we are farming the original, and legendary Block L, and our bottling is the only Single Vineyard Ritchie to carry the Block L designation.

Gap's Crown

Gap's Crown Vineyard is just coming into it's own. It's becoming famous for exceptional Chardonnay and Pinot Noir. You'll see more and more Single Vineyard designations from this vineyard in the years to come. We have been making our Sixteen by Twenty Chardonnay from this vineyard for several years, but we have now secured an exceptional block at the top of the vineyard with extraordinary exposure and drainage. We now know this vineyard well enough to produce a wine with unique expression that will represent the place and terrroir of this corner of the Gap's Crown Vineyard.




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