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Chehalem Mountains

August 27, 2018 by owbconnect

Chehalem Mountains

Established: 2006
Total Area: 62,500 acres (25,300 ha)
Planted Area: 2,720 acres (1,100 ha)
Predominant Soils: Marine sedimentary, volcanic, loess (Laurelwood series)
Predominant Varieties: Pinot noir, Chardonnay, Pinot gris, Riesling, Pinot blanc, Gamay noir

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About

The Chehalem Mountains AVA is contained within the Willamette Valley AVA and is located 19 miles (30 km) southwest of Portland and 45 miles (70 km) east of the Pacific Ocean. The region is defined by its namesake Chehalem Mountains, a single landmass made up of several hilltops, ridges and spurs with the tallest point, Bald Peak, at 1,633 feet (498 m) above sea level. These mountains, identified as the highest in the Willamette Valley, greatly impact the vineyards by sheltering them from winds blowing south through the Columbia Gorge.

Volcanic soils, marine sedimentary soils and a distinct series of loess called Laurelwood can all be found throughout the Chehalem Mountains AVA. Most of the vineyards are planted between 200 and 1,000 feet (60-305 m) elevation. Due to its great diversity, leaders are continually working to learn the intricacies of the land and further define their region. In 2005, Ribbon Ridge, contained within the Chehalem Mountains AVA, was approved as an AVA defined by its Willakenzie series of sedimentary soil.

With such diversity of elevations, soils and aspects, this region offers wines of great complexity and intrigue. The cool climate and endless combinations of soils and elevations produce wines with defined structure, offering notes of strawberries and cherries in cooler vintages and darker fruit in riper years.

Region History:

Chehalem Mountains’ winegrowing history dates back to 1968 when UC Davis alum Dick Erath purchased 49 acres (20 ha) on Dopp Road in Yamhill County. He aptly called the property Chehalem Mountain Vineyard. By the mid to late 1970s, there was a patchwork of vineyards in the area, including those owned by the now-recognizable founders Adelsheims and the Ponzis. The Chehalem Mountains AVA was formally approved in 2006.

Applegate Valley

August 27, 2018 by owbconnect

Applegate Valley

Established: 2000
Total Area: 278,190 acres (112,600 ha)
Planted Area: 750 acres (300 ha)
Predominant Soils: Stream Sediments
Predominant Varieties: Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, Chardonnay, Syrah, Tempranillo, Pinot noir

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About

The Applegate Valley AVA is contained within the larger Rogue Valley and Southern Oregon AVAs. It stretches 50 miles (80 km) north from the California border to the Rogue River just west of Grants Pass. Surrounded by the Siskiyou Mountains, the Applegate Valley is shielded from cooling marine winds coming from the Pacific Ocean. Vineyards are typically grown at elevations up to 2,000 feet (610 m) and experience hot days and cool nights.

The Applegate River greatly influenced the development of soils in the area. Most vineyards are planted on stream terraces or alluvial fans, providing deep, well-drained soils that are ideal for high-quality wine grapes.

Wines from this region are generally plush, full-bodied, fruit-forward Bordeaux- and Rhône- style wines with a subtle underlying minerality.

Region History:

Applegate Valley’s wine history began in 1852 when an early settler named Peter Britt planted wine grapes. In 1873, he opened Valley View Winery, Oregon’s first official winery. Valley View closed in 1907; then Prohibition hit. It wasn’t until the 1970s, after modern pioneers began discovering the neighboring areas’ quality wine growing conditions, that the Applegate Valley experienced a resurgence of winemaking. It began with a few family-run wineries that planted their roots and opened their doors. Today, this area is an important winegrowing region turning out a diversity of high-quality wines. The appellation became official in 2000.

Van Duzer Corridor

August 26, 2018 by owbconnect

Van Duzer Corridor

Established: 2019
Total Area: 59,850 acres (24,220 ha)
Planted Area: 1,000 acres (405 ha)
Predominant Soils: Marine sedimentary
Predominant Varieties: Pinot noir, Chardonnay, Pinot gris, Riesling, Pinot blanc, Sauvignon blanc

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About

The Van Duzer Corridor AVA is contained within the Willamette Valley AVA and is located approximately 50 miles (80 km) southwest of Portland and 40 miles (64 km) east of the Pacific Ocean. The AVA is named after the Van Duzer Corridor, a natural break in the Coast Range that results in 40-50% stronger winds in the afternoon compared to other Willamette Valley AVAs. Direct coastal wind exposure results in cooler average temperatures and higher grape skin-to-pulp ratios, producing wines with more phenolic structure, densely structured tannins and firm acids.

The Van Duzer Corridor is comprised primarily of marine sedimentary soil. The region’s trademark afternoon winds combined with these soils result in Pinot noirs offering notes of dark fruits, tea leaf and earth. White wines tend to have bright fruit and acid-driven profiles complimented by weight and texture.

Region History:

The appellation became official in January 2019.

Columbia Gorge

August 9, 2018 by owbconnect

Columbia Gorge

Vertiginous cliffs plunge to the mighty Columbia River below, while on the plateaus above, wind-swept vineyards are planted on complex, ancient soils. The Columbia Gorge AVA, no stranger to superlatives, is defined by the river that cuts through the majestic Cascades—and by the Missoula Floods that scoured the region 15,000 years ago. In this dramatic tableau of geological history, winegrowers cultivate diverse varieties in climates that vary wildly—from the high desertlike east, to the cooler, wetter west. So many different grapes thrive in this region, from Arneis to Zinfandel, that it’s no wonder enthusiasts celebrate it as “a world of wine in 40 miles.”

Established: 2004
Total Area: 186,610 acres (75,520 ha) total, 120,010 acres (48,565 ha) in Oregon
Planted Area: 925 acres (375 ha)
Predominant Soils: Volcanic, lahar, loess, silt, sand
Predominant Varieties: Many different varieties thrive, varies by geography and elevation

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About

Just 60 miles (95 km) east of Portland, the Columbia Gorge AVA lies in the heart of the dramatic river corridor that straddles the Columbia River along the borders of Oregon and Washington.

The climate in the Columbia Gorge AVA is categorized as transitional. The western end of the Columbia Gorge, close to the Cascade Mountains, has a cooler, marine-influenced climate where it rains 36 inches (91 cm) per year. Stretching 40 miles (65 km) eastward, the climate transitions to continental high desert with just 10 inches (25 cm) of annual rainfall. Throughout the Gorge, elevations of vineyard sites range from sea level to 2,000 feet (610 m), which greatly impacts temperatures during the growing season.

The Columbia River Gorge is the only sea-level passage through the Cascade Mountain Range, funneling persistent winds at an average speed of 10-20 miles per hour (16-32 kph) or more, acting as a cooling and drying force to the vineyards.

This extreme variance of climate means the Columbia Gorge AVA can successfully grow a wide range of classical varieties. Wines produced from this region tend to be riper than wines from Oregon’s cooler, western regions with higher acidity and structure than what occurs naturally in the warmer, eastern AVAs.

Region History:

Lewis and Clark first made the Columbia Gorge famous when they passed through on their way to the Pacific Ocean in 1805. Grapegrowing in the Columbia Gorge area dates back to the 1880s when the Jewitt family (who founded the town of White Salmon, WA) planted American vines they had brought with them from Illinois. Other pioneer families followed suit, and today some of their original vines are still alive and have withstood sub-zero temperatures. It wasn’t until the 1970s that post-Prohibition pioneers started experimenting with vineyards on the south-facing slopes of the Underwood Mountain in Washington. Over the next two decades, well-known winemakers started to discover the incredible potential of grapes grown in this region. The Columbia Gorge appellation became official in 2004.

Industry History

July 30, 2018 by owbconnect

Industry history

Like veterans of the Oregon Trail who came here with grit, determination and a sense of daring, Oregon’s winemakers are pioneers — bucking trends, setting new ones and working collaboratively to raise the bar. There was Peter Britt, who in 1854 established the Northwest’s first winery. Then came  Richard Sommer in 1961 who started Oregon’s first post-prohibition winery in the Umpqua Valley. David Lett and Charles Coury followed in 1965 and laid the roots of winemaking legend in the Willamette Valley. More recently, there were the Oregon vintners who in 1995 banded together to create eco-certification LIVE (Low Impact Viticulture and Enology), one of the most authoritative sustainability accreditations in the wine world. Today, with 18 AVAs, almost 700 wineries, and grape plantings ranging from Albariño to Zinfandel, Oregon winemakers are leading the industry in progressive, sustainable practices while expanding on their already well-established reputation for crafting exceptional wines.

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Had Oregon’s early wine pioneers listened to the “experts,” Oregon would not have a wine industry today. But that’s what makes Oregonians special. They are part dreamers and part determined trail blazers, unconcerned about what the critics say can’t be done. This has been the history of the Oregon wine industry, characterized by an often-irrational determination to prove the skeptics wrong and do the “impossible.”

In 1961, winemaker Richard Sommer ignored whispers of discouragement from his University of California at Davis cohorts and trudged north to the Umpqua Valley to plant his roots  ̶  more specifically, to plant Riesling and small amounts of other varieties, including Oregon’s first Pinot noir and Chardonnay. Soon after his successful establishment of HillCrest Vineyard near the Southern Oregon town of Roseburg, other winemakers migrated to this warm, dry growing region.

Meanwhile, three other UC Davis refugees also ignored the grumblings of their naysaying colleagues and trekked north to the Willamette Valley. Here they believed they could successfully grow high-quality cool-climate varieties.

Between 1965 and 1968, David Lett, Charles Coury and Dick Erath, along with their families, ventured north and established vineyards in the Willamette Valley. They were the first in the Willamette Valley to plant Pinot noir, and they also planted small amounts of related varieties, including Pinot gris, Chardonnay, and Riesling.

Belief in terroir

These modern wine pioneers truly believed that Oregon would one day become an important winegrowing region. Other believers were not far behind. Within the next decade, David and Ginny Adelsheim, Ron and Marjorie Vuylsteke, Dick and Nancy Ponzi, Joe and Pat Campbell, and Bill and Susan Sokol Blosser all planted roots in the North Willamette Valley.

These families were hard workers. Each held day jobs—teacher, doctor, salesperson—to support their winemaking endeavors. And they toiled in a collaborative spirit, sharing advice, humor and encouragement as they began writing history by producing superior wines in Oregon. Though it wasn’t until David Lett entered his Pinot noir in the 1979 Gault-Millau French Wine Olympiad and placed in the top 10 in a blind tasting among the finest Burgundies that the world started to take notice of Oregon as a serious winemaking region.

In just 50 years, Oregon has evolved into a world-class winegrowing region with 18 approved AVAs and nearly 700 wineries producing wine from 72 grape varieties. As a wine region, Oregon will continue to grow and evolve, but it will always be a place where small, handcrafted wines dominate, where collaboration and community are ingrained in the culture, and where the growers and winemakers are never far from the tasting room.

Industry Statistics

July 30, 2018 by owbconnect

Industry statistics

Small production. High quality. Big impact. That’s the story of Oregon’s wine industry, which over the past decade has seen an explosion in growth but hasn’t lost sight of its values: family-owned farms, attention to place, uncompromising focus on crafting singular, expressive wines. The number of vineyards in Oregon has nearly doubled since 2005, yet 70% of Oregon wineries produce fewer than 5,000 cases a year, and Oregon’s winemakers continue to garner accolades for their diverse bottlings. In fact, although Oregon produces only 1% of the country’s wine, in 2015 and 2016 it earned 20% of Wine Spectator’s domestic 90+ ratings.

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