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AlFulchino

Winemaker of 30+ years
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<iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/3519159" width="400" height="267" frameborder="0"></iframe><p><a href="http://vimeo.com/3519159">Robert Parker's *****</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/user1321935">Josh Hermsmeyer</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>

link [ame]http://vimeo.com/3519159[/ame]

gotta love the guy holding the sign that says 'will over oak for 90 points"
 
i got it wrong :) these videos are cool because they give insights into mindsets, attitudes and judgements made by industry players....it helps round out the wine scene. there are as many wines being made as roads in a metropolis.....and the same with tastes and opinions.
 
simple answer.....me, i can do it no other way.......after having several other businesses that made a few dollars big and small, i have learned that over time you feel soul-less selling a product that makes money but is not necessarily in your heart...jumping thru the daily hoops ( and i lost some big money too!)....
this is no story made to sell my wine....i do love what i do....to love to blend, i love the sun on my face from march thru october and that i sleep easy every night...and i said a prayer that i hoped others would like what i brought to the table ( last year, our first yr at least...they did)...i know it all may sound corny...but it is what it is...i am not reinventing the wine making wheel...i just do what i do...i can never learn all there is to know about the wine making world so i dont try, i just live in the current moment and cant do any more than that, and i don't proclaim to be the best winemaker in the world, i am sure that i am not but i dont need to be....i do know that i am not the worst winemaker in the world ;)

one last thing because this is a great subject no matter what field you are in...my other businesses had to be very cognizant of what the other guy was doing...what he was pricing etc etc.....in this business i made a pact w myself that i would not do anything in winemaking but what i enjoyed and i would not compete with anyone....i would throw my wines on the table for the consumer and say 'this is me, i truly truly, truly hope you like it because i think these wines say something'...

there is a danger in watching your competition...true you can learn a thing or two...but it is MORE likely that you will become generic and you will lose your intuition....i have seen this happen...and i see it happen to people in this business as well.....

let me be frank..i consider it a blessing to sell one bottle of wine...and i am grateful for each bottle that find a happy home...on my website is recently posted a wine review from a new jersey customer ....my daughter could not believe what the lady said about our wine....that all hits me in the heart in a way that all my other businesses never ever did

more than you wanna know right! :)

i am gonna go check my airlocks ;)
 
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this article discusses book on biodynamics in terms of commenting on a book entitled ""Why I Resent Biodyanic Farming"

what is really interesting the feedback on the article which actually highlights the whole point of the book

bio d people think something is true so it must be true...

http://fermentation.typepad.com/fer...d-resenting-the-biodynamic-wine-movement.html

personally speaking i have never had to use an insecticide but have had to use fungicides....even they get a bad name...most of what i have used is organic oils and thinks like zinc and manganese which essentially are trace minerals....but why some people think a cow head planted in the north corner if the vineyard during the new moon helps is laughable witchcraft...their cup of ego runneth over
 
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third article speaks interestingly to the subject that Luc raised the other day about low priced wines
http://www.winespectator.com/blogs/show/id/44451
exploring wine with tim fish
Tim Fish

Jan 26, 2011

What Does It Take to Make an $8 Wine?
Glut of California Syrah is a boon to consumers
Posted: Feb 9, 2011 10:30am ET
12Share

A while back, I was talking to a winemaker about the challenges of making a truly great high-end wine. First, he said, you need to find an extraordinary vineyard and farm it meticulously. Then pamper the wine from vine to bottle, using the latest technology and the best French oak barrels. When you get it right, you can sell it for $75 or $100 a bottle.

“But that’s easy, really,” he told me with a laugh. “Anyone can do that. Have you ever tried to keep 6 million gallons of wine fermenting?”

Today that winemaker is producing $75 Pinot Noirs in Sonoma County. But he apprenticed in the factory wineries of Modesto, Calif., and understands that producing good, inexpensive wine is harder than people realize.

I thought of him the other day when I had a glass of Smoking Loon Syrah California 2008. I thought it was juicy and lively and surprisingly complex for the price, with notes of cherry, cranberry and spice. My colleague James Laube gave it 87 points (or “very good”) in a blind tasting. (See the full review in our Feb. 7 California Tasting Highlights.) How, I wondered, can an $8 bottle of Syrah be this tasty?

Turns out it’s the silver lining of the cloudy economy. “Since no one is drinking Syrah anymore, we’ve got plenty of it,” joked Don Sebastiani, Jr., president and CEO of Don Sebastiani & Sons, which produces Smoking Loon.

Syrah was on the rise in the 1990s, considered the next big thing. But it was over-planted and planted in regions where the quality was marginal. Great Syrah found a market, of course, and plenty of it sells for $75 a bottle. But America’s big love affair never took off, supply outpaced demand and then the economy staggered to a halt.

That’s a recipe for a Syrah glut. As a result, wineries have been discounting what wine they could, and the bulk market—where the industry barters and buys wine by the hundreds and thousands of gallons—has been flooded. And some of it is good stuff. Companies like Don Sebastiani & Sons buy those producers’ excess wine (at a steep discount) and then put it under their own label. That’s what the French call a négociant.

So that $8 Smoking Loon could contain Syrah that might have sold for $30 or $40 in a better market. Sebastiani says part of the blend was purchased on the bulk market, with the balance coming from the company’s annual wine and grape contracts. “The blend is almost entirely Syrah, with a touch of Petite Sirah and Merlot,” he said. “About 40 percent came from Paso Robles, 30 percent from River Junction, near Ceres, and 30 percent is miscellaneous California.”

At the winery, they relied on techniques that cause purists to roll their eyes but are standard operating procedure for today’s producers of inexpensive wines. Blended into the 2008 was 0.1 percent of a product named Mega Purple, a wine concentrate that adds a darker color. The blend was aged in stainless-steel tanks using French and American oak staves to add a touch of toast and spice. Winemakers also used microoxygenation, which infuses small amounts of oxygen into the wine as it ages.

“The staves and the micro-ox do an incredible job of simulating oak-barrel aging,” Sebastiani said. Since a barrel holds 25 cases and the average barrel costs between $500 and $1,000, most wines under $10 don’t see the inside of one.

If you pick up the March 31 issue of Wine Spectator, you can read Laube’s tasting report on Syrah and other varietals that originated in France’s Rhône Valley. Plenty of the top wines and producers come from Paso Robles (including Justin Smith’s Saxum winery, maker of 2010’s Wine of the Year). You won’t find any of the most highly rated wines in Smoking Loon, but there might be something from a few miles away.

Do you know of other good value Syrahs? While Smoking Loon 2008 is a good buy, store shelves are plentiful with inexpensive Syrah, whether from California, Australia or Europe. You might also look for: Castle Rock Syrah Columbia Valley 2007 (88, $12), Big House Syrah Santa Barbara The Slammer 2007 (87, $12), Chateau Ste. Michelle Syrah Columbia Valley 2007 (87, $13) or Pascual Toso Syrah Mendoza 2009 (87, $12).

At this price point, experimentation is half the fun, right?
 
simple answer.....me, i can do it no other way.......after having several other businesses that made a few dollars big and small, i have learned that over time you feel soul-less selling a product that makes money but is not necessarily in your heart...jumping thru the daily hoops ( and i lost some big money too!)....
this is no story made to sell my wine....i do love what i do....to love to blend, i love the sun on my face from march thru october and that i sleep easy every night...and i said a prayer that i hoped others would like what i brought to the table ( last year, our first yr at least...they did)...i know it all may sound corny...but it is what it is...i am not reinventing the wine making wheel...i just do what i do...i can never learn all there is to know about the wine making world so i dont try, i just live in the current moment and cant do any more than that, and i don't proclaim to be the best winemaker in the world, i am sure that i am not but i dont need to be....i do know that i am not the worst winemaker in the world ;)

one last thing because this is a great subject no matter what field you are in...my other businesses had to be very cognizant of what the other guy was doing...what he was pricing etc etc.....in this business i made a pact w myself that i would not do anything in winemaking but what i enjoyed and i would not compete with anyone....i would throw my wines on the table for the consumer and say 'this is me, i truly truly, truly hope you like it because i think these wines say something'...

there is a danger in watching your competition...true you can learn a thing or two...but it is MORE likely that you will become generic and you will lose your intuition....i have seen this happen...and i see it happen to people in this business as well.....

let me be frank..i consider it a blessing to sell one bottle of wine...and i am grateful for each bottle that find a happy home...on my website is recently posted a wine review from a new jersey customer ....my daughter could not believe what the lady said about our wine....that all hits me in the heart in a way that all my other businesses never ever did

more than you wanna know right! :)

i am gonna go check my airlocks ;)

Al,
You are a wise and honest man. I hope to someday have the privilege of meeting you.
 
over the top compliments like that will get you some wine if you do come up ;)
 
New York State IPM Program to Close in March

http://author.cals.cornell.edu/cals/grapesandwine/appellation-cornell/issue-5/ipm.cfm

COMMENTARY
New York State IPM Program to Close in March

By Tim Martinson
IPMLOGO100
NEWAWeather250



After 30 years of existence, the New York State Integrated Pest Management (NYS IPM) program is slated to close at the end of March. This program, funded through the New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets, is a casualty of New York State's budget deficit and the estimated $9 billion budget gap that needs to be addressed by the legislature and governor.

The concept of Integrated Pest Management came out of a book of the same name by University of California scientists Robert Van Den Bosch and Vern Stern, published in 1967. The book documented the failure in California of strictly pesticide-based pest management by the early 1960s and suggested an emphasis on using multiple disease and insect management tactics, scouting, and "decision rules" as an alternative.

Since creation of the NYS IPM Program, these IPM concepts have moved from novel alternatives to the mainstream standard in New York agriculture. The development and use of these ideas was well underway when the NYS IPM Program was established, but the program provided an infrastructure and focal point for publicizing the systems-based concepts to growers.

IPM became an integral part of our overall research and extension team at Cornell–a team that has provided useful tools for growers to use in managing pests. Grape berry moth risk assessment, growing degree-days to track pest and vine development, disease forecasting models, and weekly updates from your regional extension program: these are all tools that came out of research and extension programs at Cornell and elsewhere. For many grape growers they are an everyday part of managing their grapes. Grape growers throughout New York benefit from and depend upon a terrific range of services facilitated by the program.

* The New York and Pennsylvania Grape Pest Management Guidelines. IPM specialist Tim Weigle, with colleague Andy Muza from Pennsylvania Cooperative Extension, has edited and coordinated this publication, with input from subject area experts, for the past 18 years. During this time, it has grown from a 24 page spray guide to a more comprehensive reference, with sections on spray technology, worker protection, developing an overall strategy, and many others. The print edition now has an accompanying internet edition. This may be the most widely used and cited reference on the nuts-and-bolts of insect, disease, and weed management for vineyards in eastern North America. Grape pest management guides from other states (Midwestern, Michigan) utilize information derived from it.
* NEWA weather network.This statewide network takes weather data from grower-owned and sited weather stations and summarizes it in useful form for growers. Curious about degree-days, winter low temperatures, rainfall, and leaf wetness? This is where you find data from over 100 weather stations statewide and 15 in the Finger Lakes alone. This is available because grower-owned weather stations in commercial vineyards are linked to the NEWA server and information gets uploaded to a common format every day. In my opinion, the network makes each weather station more valuable to the grower who owns it–part of the value added being the pest management models (e.g., disease forecasting and grape berry moth timing), but a more important part being understanding how weather data from one location relates to others. "It was minus five degrees at my place. Wonder how cold it got over on Cayuga Lake?" The network adds value and NYS IPM has been the principal force behind its development and maintenance.
* Trac-Grape record keeping software.This Excel-based template, developed by Fruit IPM coordinator Juliet Carroll, simplifies record keeping for hundreds of growers and puts it into the numerous (and often incompatible) formats needed for reports to different processors and wineries. Pesticide use reporting is a requirement for all growers, and this product reduces the time and effort they must devote to paperwork documenting pesticide use. Widely employed now, it is a product that will need regular updating in order to remain useful as product registrations and reporting requirements change.
* Production Guide for Organic Grapes. This guide, produced last year, gathers together information available on organic vineyard management topics, including pest management, into one place that is readily accessible to those interested in organic production. The IPM program took the lead, with funding from the New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets, in developing this resource and several others for different commodities.
* Grape Pest Fact Sheets. Fact sheets for 18 grape insect and disease pests, written by faculty and staff as early as 1984 and as recently as 2007, provide color photos and detailed information on the life cycles, identification, and control of these pests.

Obviously (to me at least) these "products" are only part of the story. Tim Weigle is also the team leader for the Lake Erie Grape Program and Julie Carroll (fruit coordinator and plant pathologist) works on many other research and outreach projects, notably leading the recent redesign of the Cornell Fruit Pages, which provides information covering a wide array of topics on the web. Both participate in and organize numerous educational presentations and publications for the grape industry.

Shrinking resources are a sign of the times, as many states struggle with their budgets. There are likely to be other cutbacks and diminishing resources to support services and outreach activities. While it's likely that at least some of the items listed above will continue in some form, the time and effort that extension educators put into them will necessarily be drawn away from other projects. Thus, it's clear that the loss of IPM staff support is going to have a huge impact on our overall pest management programs.

It will be important for those of you from industry to get together and consider how these products add value to your vineyard and winery operations. If you consider the information provided through these services to be important to your business, how can they be supported in the future? Are there alternatives out there, whether they be user fees, subscriptions, or non-profit associations supported by memberships, that will support these activities? Will letting your legislators know about these things change their decisions affecting these programs?

I'm not advocating for any of these particular approaches, but I do know that there will be many changes associated with the budget crisis that will have an impact on what we at Cornell will be able to provide in the future. Those of you in industry will be key players in deciding what you want, what information you need, how it should be packaged, and how to support it. Please speak up, provide input, consider what you value and depend upon, and let us and others know about it.

Tim Martinson is senior extension associate in the department of horticulture at the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station
 
Great article and thanks for sharing. Hopefully guys like you and Rich will keep coming on here and other places and o your best at helping people with their vineyards and what works best for you.
 
Press Release / Lake Champlain Wine

this press release was just emailed to me in case anyone is interested
_______

Lake Champlain Wines

For Immediate Release

February 16, 2011

Plattsburgh, NY

Lake Champlain Wines is pleased to announce a winemaking workshop “Making Quality Wines from Cold Hardy Grapes” will be held on Friday March 11, 2011 at Crickets Restaurant, 697 Bear Swamp Rd, Peru, NY, Exit
35 I87. There will also be a “bring what you've got” tasting of regional wines on Saturday March 12, 2011 at Michele's Fine Dining, 5131 U.S.
Avenue, Plattsburgh, NY.

Featured speakers at Friday's workshop will be: Dr. Anna Katharine Mansfield, Assistant Professor of Enology, Cornell University; Chris Gerling, Enology Extension Associate, Cornell University; and Chris Granstrom, proprietor and winemaker of Lincoln Peak Vineyard and Winery, New Haven, VT.

The program will provide an in depth perspective of Cold Climate Grapes, appropriate wine styles, and winemaking practice geared toward successful commercial production of quality wine. This will be a unique opportunity to gain first hand knowledge from the leading edge of both academic and commercial Cold Climate wine experts.

The workshop will run from 9:00 am to 5:00 pm with registration at 8:30 am. The cost is $35 for Lake Champlain Wines members and $50 for others, based on pre-registration and prepayment. The cost at the door will $45 for members and $60 for others. A light breakfast and lunch will be provided.


The wine tasting on Saturday will begin at 11:00 am, and will be free for registered participants in the workshop and $5.00 for others. Lunch will be available from the Michele's menu.


Participants in Saturday's tasting are encouraged to bring their wines, finished as well as 2010 tank samples. This will be an opportunity to taste the range of wines from the region as well as get a preview of the exceptional 2010 vintage.

For more information and a registration packet visitwww.lakechamplainwines.org, email Lake Champlain Wines President Natalie Peck,[email protected], or phone Lake Champlain Wines Treasurer Nancy Vesco, 518-846-8544.
###

Media Contact: Rob McDowell 518-335-4981 [email protected]

Lake Champlain Wines PO Box 2344 Plattsburgh, NY 12901

www.lakechamplainwines.org
 
images


i dont have any details on this...but this is a cool picture....it is a pic of a peruvian wine press
 
Calories in Liquor????

here is a story on a subject we discussed here a few weeks back

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11048/1125805-389.stm

Alcohol industry balks at counting calories
Thursday, February 17, 2011
By Bill Toland, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The calorie-counters out there already know how many calories are in that Diet Coke (zero). But wouldn't it be nice to know exactly how many calories are in the rum or whiskey that you mix with your cola?

Or in that White Russian?

Or that towering, 20-ounce Long Island iced tea? On second thought, maybe it's better not to know, which is why there hasn't been a public clamor for more nutritional information on the back of that bottle of booze.

Spirits, as well as wine, are among the few foodstuff items that don't bear a nutrition label of substance. The only thing a booze label is required to convey to the consumer is the "proof," or alcohol content, in the bottle. Beer bottles aren't much more illustrative, sometimes offering up the number of calories and alcohol percentage and possibly carbohydrate levels, but not much else.

"In the year 2011, it's sort of bizarre that alcohol's the only consumable product sold in the United States that you can't tell what's inside the bottle," Guy L. Smith, executive vice president in North America for Diageo, said to The Associated Press.

Federal regulators may want that to change, and have been debating improved alcohol labeling since the early years of the George W. Bush administration. But the three affected industries -- spirits, wine and beer makers -- don't always get along, and they have been at odds over how to best display nutritional information and serving sizes.

The issue is revived from time to time, and the National Consumers League revived it again, late in 2010, when it issued a statement urging the U.S. Tax and Trade Bureau to get its act together.

The Tax and Trade Bureau is the federal agency with authority over alcohol labels, and it continues to debate a new set of alcohol labeling regulations. Most recently, the bureau considered a rule that would have required an "alcohol facts" label on all bottles (or cans, or boxes) of alcohol, but it declined to formally endorse that rule.

"The drinking public needs certain basic information on beer, wine and spirits labels," said consumers league Executive Director Sally Greenberg. "With a severe nationwide obesity epidemic, there is no excuse for not having calories listed on all alcohol beverage labels."

The group also suggested that the nine college students who fell ill last year after drinking too much of a caffeinated alcoholic beverage might not have made that mistake if they knew the exact contents, and serving size, of the drink they were imbibing. (One such brand is Four Loko, made at the former Rolling Rock brewery.)

Suggesting that the college kids might have had less to drink if only they'd known that a can of Four Loko represented, say, 2.5 servings of alcohol, rather than one serving, is a bit like saying that pigs might eat fewer truffles if they knew about the saturated fat levels. But the National Consumers League's larger point is that a wide cross-section of imbibers -- from calorie-counters to diabetics to those with food allergies -- would benefit from improved nutritional disclosure on alcohol bottle labels.

Consensus seems far away. The beer industry wants to update the notion that a serving of booze represents 1.5 ounces; otherwise, the 100 or so calories in a 12-ounce bottle of beer might suffer by comparison to an artificially low calorie measurement for spirits.

The wine industry has a separate beef: With all of the varietals and blends that go into making a particular vintage in a particular year, a winery would have to calculate nutritional information for every new vintage. Instead, it wants to use broader estimates in its labeling, the rough number of calories and carbs in each serving.

And what's the point of nutritional information on a bottle of booze when most mixed drinks are imbibed at bars and restaurants, where no one is going to look at the bottle anyway?

Meanwhile, the Competitive Enterprise Institute, a pro-business think tank, says the labeling standards are so much hogwash and wouldn't do anything to curb our obesity problem, as the consumers league suggests.

"While benefits are unclear, such mandates pose drawbacks for consumers -- both monetary and aesthetic," the institute says. In other words, people like pretty labels on their bottles of wine, and a black-and-white "alcohol facts" box would muck that up.

The Enterprise Institute also points out that nutritional information can be found online, in some cases. Diageo, the international beverage distributor, runs a website called drinkIQ.com that offers fat, calorie, protein, carb and serving information (all of those measurements are based on a serving size of 1.5 ounces, another point of contention with the beer industry, which says 1.5 ounces doesn't accurately reflect the amount of booze people imbibe in a drink).

Diageo's ingredient information is more hit-and-miss. For example, the site tells us Baileys Original Irish Cream contains "fresh dairy cream, sugar, alcohol, maltodextrin, milk products, cocoa extracts and flavours, Irish whiskey, coloring: 150b, emulsifier: E471, acidity regulator: E331."

But for Guinness, another Diageo brand, ingredients are not available. For Johnnie Walker, the ingredients disclosure is just a description of how Scotch is made. Tanqueray gin is made of "water, alcohol, juniper berries and other natural botanicals"; for Black Haus, a blackberry schnapps brand, the website says the only ingredient is "Blackberry Schnapps Liqueur."

The consumers league says inaction at the federal level is out of step with national dietary trends, which put more nutritional information in the hands of consumers.

"Label reform for alcoholic beverages is a no-brainer," Ms. Greenberg said in the statement.

Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11048/1125805-389.stm#ixzz1EL2VNAyC
 
New Things Coming in Shipping

http://www.winesandvines.com/templa...&htitle=Temperature Control for Wine Shipping

Temperature Control for Wine Shipping
Companies to launch new services to protect wine quality during transit

by Kerry Kirkham


DtC shipments temperature controlled wine shipping DtT GSO FedEx

DtC shipments decline in the summer months.
San Rafael, Calif. -- More temperature-controlled shipping options are set to roll out for Northern California wineries this spring. FedEx, headquartered in Memphis, Tenn., will launch a new overnight direct-to-consumer (DtC) temperature-controlled shipping option in April.

This week, Golden State Overnight (GSO), based in Alameda, Calif., debuted its temperature-controlled overnight direct-to-trade (DtT) wine-shipping program, expanding on its existing overnight temperature-controlled DtC program.

The last mile—the final link in the distribution chain after the shipment leaves a distribution hub via a delivery truck—is a great concern for shippers. The temperature-controlled environment ends there, with the shipment on the truck. This can become a real issue if an adult is not available to sign for delivery during cool morning hours.

Seasonal shipping solutions
According to the Wines & Vines/ShipCompliant Shipment Model, DtC wine shipments sharply decline during summer months, dipping to the lowest levels during July, August and September. Shipments begin to trend upward in October.

Jeff Carroll, vice president of compliance at ShipCompliant, Boulder, Colo., told Wines & Vines, “In the past, wineries would completely shut down shipping during the hot months of June, July, August and September. You’re starting now to see innovative approaches to applying temperature-control technologies and solutions to find windows of opportunities during those months.”

ShipCompliant offers a free tool on its website to analyze shipping files with ZIP code-level precision to determine if wine shipments will be safe within user-specified low and high temperature thresholds.

FedEx’s new overnight DtC option
“We’ve heard from several customers their interest and desire to get a summer solution,” said FedEx district sales manager Caroline Viger-Uu. “We’ve found that summer shipping volumes drop about 50% in the summer, so we thought it would be viable to come up with a solution to continue shipping all year long.”

To that end, FedEx will introduce an overnight, temperature- controlled wine shipping option for pick-up at wineries in the Napa/Sonoma areas. Pick-ups will feed five shipping hubs covering 70% of the country, with delivery by 10:30 the next morning.

Since FedEx has a division focused on the pharmaceutical industry, resources and equipment for temperature-controlled shipping are already in place. The new service launches a northern Napa/Sonoma-Chicago-Newark route in April and a southern Texas/Atlanta route in May.

Temperature-controlled trucks that maintain a steady 55°F will be used to ship to FedEx hubs. From the hubs, the wine will go out for delivery via regular trucks early the following morning.

Asked if wine shipments will be handled any differently once loaded onto a standard FedEx delivery truck, Carla Boyd, spokesperson for FedEx responded, “No. We will communicate internally to ensure couriers are aware of the service, and that deliveries are completed as quickly as possible.”

In the event an adult isn’t available to sign for wine shipment upon initial delivery, instead of being exiled to a potentially remote FedEx hub, shipments can be redirected to a customer’s nearest FedEx office location. There, the wine can be held as long as five business days in a temperature-controlled environment until an adult signs for it.

Pricing for the new service is still being finalized, but Saturday delivery will be available at no additional charge. FedEx’s temperature-controlled shipping service is slated to run April through September.

Currently, FedEx does not plan to offer temperature-controlled DtT wine-shipping options.

GSO’s overnight DtT service
As a regional alternative to national carriers, Golden State Overnight offers service within California, Nevada and Arizona. Shipments can be picked up from any winery within the state of California.

The impact of GSO’s overnight DtT launch is unclear within the context of the broader wine industry DtT picture. Mark Ruch, director of marketing at GSO, said, “It seems reasonable that the smaller wineries, at the very least, would opt for a simplified model for moving wine shipments to trade in the California, Nevada and Arizona regions. We’ve been in business since 1995; it is interesting that this demand is a relatively recent occurrence.”

At a potential cost savings for wineries, trade-enabled fulfillment houses and distributors, DtT overnight delivery service eliminates the need for warehousing and shipping routines, said Morley Chandler, CEO of GSO.

Vince Johnson, director of select wine service, said that GSO’s DtT temperature-controlled overnight program, like its temperature- controlled DtC wine shipping program, will run year-round, based on winery demand.

Another vendor, Wineshipping.com, has been shipping all packages temperature-controlled for three years. The shipments are sent by temperature-controlled trucks to four UPS hubs—in Texas, Illinois, Georgia and New York—then delivered the next day. The UPS trucks aren’t temperature controlled, but deliver in the morning. The company, which claims to be the country’s largest wine shipper, will use Fed-Ex or GSO if customers wish, according to Jennifer Goodrich, director, sales and customer service. She added that customers now save about 40% using the Wineshipping system compared to air.
 
Wow, Al, I feel like I am letting folks down here in NY. You are letting folks know about what is going on right here- literally. The Lake Champlain Wines Winemaking Workshop is what my association is sponsoring aT A LOCATION MERE MILES AWAY FROM MY VINEYARD AND WINERY. We had our monthly board meeting last evening and this is one of our items for next month. We have about 40 people signed up so far, including people from some distance away. We even got one registration from an editor at a nationally recognized wine publication.

We are also in the planning stages for a large fall event this year where we will feature our area wineries while drawing tourists from the northeast and Canada around Montreal, about 60 miles away.
 
I think I like that Peruvian press. I dont think I want all the work of having enough grapes to fill that puppy though!!!
 

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