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Enough philosophy and back to blogging. I did take my cluster pictures last week but feeling as though I had nothing to write about but complaining about the weather and the birds I decided not to post. So you get two weeks worth of pictures again and you can see the effect of some of what I would have complained about when you compare the two. If you look at the Foch grapes there is a darker area in the middle of the cluster in this week's picture. That is were the waxy protective layer I think has started to break down. If you look closer and between the grapes you can see the very beginning of botrytis rot setting in. Looking again at both pictures I realize the dark patch was already there in the previous week but the mold hadn't started growing yet. I think the fact that the cluster was already weak in that spot allowed the botrytis to start growing more easily when the rain came. I'm a little on the fence about keeping this cluster because if it weren't our picture cluster I would cut it off to avoid contaminating the surrounding grapes. Sebastian did apply a botrytis spray yesterday to the whole vineyard and hopefully that will be able to kill the spores and I will feel better about keeping the cluster until picking, which is maybe 1.5 - 2 weeks away.
On the chardonnay cluster if you near the top there is a missing grape in this week's picture. Ackk! Make that two grapes! You can thank some bird for that! Usually they eat a quite a few grapes from a cluster so either this one wasn't ripe enough so it flew off or it was disturbed before it could really tuck in. Either way I was bummed to see it missing today. So those would be our two biggest pests now.
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Back in the winery, two of our favorite volunteers Jake and Lynn arrived just in time to help me get the 2010 ans 2009 pinot noir out of barrel as well as the 2010 Marechal Foch. They did an excellent job too and the wines are in tank and ready for bottling next week. I got to go along behind and clean barrels this year and it was a fun change, less concentration and more muscles. We have also started sampling the grapes to get a base line for ripeness. I love all the colors the juice ends up. Tomorrow we are headed out to a few other vineyards to see how they are progressing. We may have fruit before we know it!