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Tolosa Staff Pruning Pictures and a Note from our Winemaker

Friday, February 3rd, 2012

There are many forms of training and pruning. The main two types that are used in our vineyards are bilateral cordon also known as spur, and cane pruning from a crown or head. Both types are mostly trained to single vertically shoot positioned canopies. We use mostly cane pruning for two reasons. The first reason has to do with bud fertility. In general the lower buds on a cane or spur are less fertile. Cool foggy climates lead to low fertility as well. Spur pruning leaves only the lower 2-3 buds so on average your cluster counts based on bud fertility are lower. Thus spur pruning has in cold climates lower average crops and greater variation year to year. It is why it is a bad idea in Pinot Noir and Chardonnay where cluster size is small. On larger clustered varieties such as Syrah and Grenache there is less risk as you can get a decent crop from relatively lower cluster counts per vine. The second reason that cane pruning is desirable is that the permanent part of the vine above the ground is smaller than in a cordon pruned vine. More of the vines storage in a cane pruned vine is thus below ground in the roots which makes for a stronger vine. There’s also some rational from a disease prevention point of view to use cane pruning.   

 -Larry Brooks, Winemaker

For more shots from our Staff Pruning visit our Facebook page and Like us!  

 

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Tolosa Winery Pays it Forward With…Sheila’s Wine Bar, Camarillo.

Friday, January 27th, 2012

Stories from the Road- by Danielle Huber

 

Five months ago, long-time supporters of Tolosa and owners of Sheila’s Wine Bar and Restaurant in Camarillo, Pablo and Bertha Medina, visited Tolosa Winery.  Pablo and Bertha made quite an impression on me.

Now, I am not materialistic by any means, but what struck me was the generosity within the hearts of these warm and beautiful people.  Bertha, Pablo’s wife, was wearing the most attractive pave set ring with a lime green stone.  And I told her so! 

Before they left Tolosa’s tasting room, Bertha took the ring off her hand and put it on mine.  “If it fits,” she said, “you have to keep it.”  It did fit, and uneasily I kept it.  Who today pulls a ring off of their finger and hands it to you?!  “It will bring you luck!” both she and her exuberant husband told me. “Really??” I thought.  Still in disbelief, I could hardly imagine.

Well luck it brought…

Two weeks later, I was offered a position to sell full time with Tolosa Winery’s outside sales team in the South Central Coast. In my five year history at Tolosa, I couldn’t have dreamed up this role.  I was the tasting room girl and tour-guide on busy Saturdays.  I was the front door girl at the pickup parties…the one who carefully remembers our wine club members.  But outside sales for Tolosa?  Really?  Me? 

My new role for Tolosa is to leave my friends and seemingly “family” in the tasting room and be an ambassador on the streets.  Taking Tolosa to restaurants and stores NEAR YOU that may or may not know how amazing these wines are.  There is work to be done!  I couldn’t have had a better training ground…and I certainly couldn’t muster more enthusiasm for this unique brand!  Thank you to all who have known me along the way!

FULL CIRCLE:

Two days ago I visited Pablo and Bertha at Sheila’s Wine Bar in Camarillo…my newest restaurant account!  What a truly meaningful experience.

The moral of the story is that ordinary people can motivate one’s life in absolutely extraordinary ways.  The story of generosity doesn’t really end with Bertha Medina of Sheila’s Wine Bar.  I promise to write more from the road, so stay tuned.  But remember this…

Wine is the medium that bridges many hearts.  Be open to what it tells you.  And remember to pay it forward!

Updates from “The Road” soon…!

Best,
Danielle Huber

Danielle Huber

Central Coast Sales

Tolosa Winery

 

Posted via email from Tolosa Winery


Trick or Treating isn’t just for kids…

Monday, October 31st, 2011

Halloween

Happy Halloween!!! Come by the Tolosa tasting room to trick or treat for frightening discounts up to 50% off! Every customer that visits the tasting room will have a chance to draw from the witches pot of discounts ranging from 5% to 50% off your purchase for the Holiday! Knock on our door and see what fate has in store for your wine drinking future this Halloween.

Open 11-5pm Daily.

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Harvest update- it’s raining

Tuesday, October 4th, 2011

Raining_harvest_day9

"The first rains of the winter moved in this morning. We’re set for a little rain today, and apparently a lot tomorrow. It’s an arctic storm which means that it will be cold and will move through quickly. During the harvest this is the best type of storm if you’ve going to have one. The alternative is tropical moisture which with its combination of rain and warm still air can cause common rot to quickly destroy your fruit.

Not all rain during harvest is harmless, and several vintages I have made were diminished by rain, but by and large it is benign. I recall my very first harvest in 1979 at Acacia when a storm moved in like this year towards the end of picking. I was very concerned, but Mike Richmond my mentor and boss at that time said, "Don’t worry, it always rains during harvest." Good advice in general about attitude towards weather if you’re going to be at all happy as a farmer. Our second harvest together we were receiving the very last fruit of the season and as we were loading it into the press the first rain of the season began falling. It felt both fated and magical. My fondest memory of harvest rain was in the late 80′s. I don’t recall the exact vintage but I suspect it was ’87 or ’88 as my son who was born in ’83 was 4 or 5 at the time. We were driving to Lee Hudson’s always anticipated harvest party. The fruit had been in for a week or so. Rain began falling heavily as we drove up. The party, always held outside, continued despite the rain. Everybody danced in the mud and got soaked. As the evening wore on, and the rain intensified, the adults retreated under the shelter of the barns while the children like little savages continued to dance around the bonfire until we took them home and to bed."

-          Larry Brooks, Winemaker

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The first grapes have arrived!!

Tuesday, September 13th, 2011

Harvest has officially begun at Tolosa! Today we brought in our first grapes from our Pinot Noir block 593, which most customers know as our Lily Gil. Block 593 is the highest point on the eastern hills of Edna Ranch. It is on a mix of soils the dominant one is reddish and of volcanic origin.  The flavor influence of the soil trumps the clonal material in this location. We also brought in the neighboring Pinot Noir block 587. In a few of these photos you’ll see winemaker, Larry Brooks, who is starting his 34th harvest, doing analysis of the grapes as they are being processed and in the last photo he is using the refractometer to measure the brix.

Come on by in the next few weeks to catch a glimpse of the action from our patio while sipping on the final product!

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