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Story of a season

posted on 30 October 2024

Hello to all our friends!

It’s been quite some time since our last newsletter, since we’ve had so many things to do. Plus the fact that this growing year, just concluded with our 2024 harvest, was certainly not among our easiest, particularly for those like us, who have chosen to farm organically. The months have sped by, and here we are just now finding the time to catch you up on what we’ve been doing.

GROWING SEASON

The growing year opened to a fairly cool winter, considering the global warming currently underway, with a freeze here and there and regular rains, which encouraged a spring budbreak that was normal, all thing considered, and not much earlier than in past seasons. Spring rains were copious from late April through all of May and June, and often so heavy and lengthy as to make our vineyard management and anti-fungal defence very challenging and nerve-wracking. July and August fortunately delivered sun and endless warmth, considerably helping us to manage things on all fronts and to prepare the fruit as best as possible for the imminent harvest. Which took place in textbook fashion in September, just before the return of torrential rains.

2024 VINTAGE

The crop was a really small one, since we lost some 40% of it to adverse weather in the spring, but meticulous, painstaking quality-selection of the grapes in the weeks preceding picking meant that e brought in very good quality grapes. Now, with fermentations almost finished, and with just the grapes for Sole di Dario, still in the drying process, we can say that the rosés, as well as the whites, are showing very well, clean and taut. The same goes for reds, which are a tad less powerful than in past vintages but still fully representative of the Cantrina style.

NEW DEVELOPMENTS

The winecellar now boasts a new occupant, a concrete “Tulip,” an eye-catching “cask” that is already coddling our new Groppello 2024. We believe that its material is splendidly suited to the maturation of this noble yet delicate grape variety. Next spring, we will be completing the planting of the new vineyard we began last year, part white varieties and part Groppello. We expect our first clusters from it in the 2025 harvest. In 2024 we bottled the two 2023 rosés and Sole di Dario 2021, Groppello 2023, Riné 2023 and Nepomuceno 2021; we are especially pleased with Zerdì . Our rebohas turned out to be a more ambitious wine, with a more spicy character, than in the past, so we thought of giving it a better dress: it’s now in a more elegant Burgundy bottle and bears a new label.

UPCOMING EVENTS

Mercato dei Vignaioli Indipendenti in Bologna, at Hall 29, stand A 42, on 22, 23, 24 November 2024.

HARVEST REPORTAGE 

This link will allows you to personally witness some moments of our harvest. Maybe one day we will gather everything together in a lovely book, all 20 harvests!

Cristina and Diego

Summer 2017 – Waiting for the harvest

posted on 7 August 2017
Well, we are almost there… After a very challenging season that spared us absolutely nothing, in terms of strange weather, we are just about to harvest the earliest-ripening grapes. Following a dry, but finally cold winter, an early, warm spring exploded on us in March, only to be abruptly interrupted on April 19 by a freeze that cost us about 30% of our crop… The season then continued, but without much rainfall, but with periods on increasing heat, particularly from June on. These were fortunately punctuated by a few rainstorms, which somewhat alleviated the drought that largely characterised this growing season.

Befana 2017

posted on 5 January 2017
Our warmest, warmest best wishes for a great New Year to you all!! At the launch of this new year and with our good Befana witch arriving on the Epiphany, we want our “greeting card” to also bring you news about our projects, expectations, and hopes for the coming year! And also a couple of small news items from the cellar: SORELI If any of you visited us recently, you will have noticed on entering that a good part of the small vineyard growing at the entrance and covering the cellar was grubbed up. Was it because of the wrong rootstock, or maybe too many passes with the tractor compacted the soil, or the wrong grape variety for the soil, poor-quality vines, or…? As a matter of fact, a good part of the vines were in bad condition and even dead, so much so that we had to take them out.

2016 Harvest

posted on 3 November 2016
The 2016 harvest is now over. So here we are, as usual, to see how things went this season, which, of course, went by in a flash… This 2016 growing year, in particular, just seemed to fly by, with vineyard operations that were unrelenting up to just before the harvest, but what we finally succeeded in bringing in to the cellar was a very good crop indeed, although at a certain point in the season things looked a bit bleak
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