|
The Columbia
River Gorge is one of the world's most
compelling natural wonders. Embracing the mighty
Columbia River on either side, the gorge is a
diverse wonderland of lush, dense forests, stark
desert dunes, majestic cliffs and heart-stopping
vistas. Over the course of 200 miles, the
Columbia spans Oregon's major wine regions to
those in Washington, dotted on either side by
vineyards.
Driving east along the gorge and then north from
Portland, Oregon, one can feel the air change
from cool and humid to dry and thin. Either side
of milepost 100, the hot desert air hits you
like a smack in the face. It is here that Oregon
and Washington snap together like two pieces of
a puzzle. You've gone from Burgundy to Bordeaux
in the blink of an eye.
Two adjacent states, both world-class wine
producers, situated in the upper left hand
corner of the United States so conveniently that
from a distance it's tempting to simply lump
them together under the Northwest heading, a
habit that does each a great disservice.
"The differences between Washington and Oregon
could not be more distinct," says Steve Burns,
head of the Washington Wine Commission, "not
only in wine styles, but in every other sense."
The climate in Washington's winegrowing region
is hot. Oregon's is cool. Washington
out-produces Oregon more than 5 to 1 and is the
second largest wine-producing state in the
union. Oregon is fourth.
Oregon's flagship variety is pinot noir.
Washington's is merlot. The majority of
Washington's wine region is semi-desert plateau,
receiving 6 to 8 inches of rainfall each year.
Oregon's fertile Willamette Valley averages 45
inches of rain per year.
Oregon has phylloxera, Washington doesn't.
Washington has Stimson Lane, Oregon doesn't. (Stimson
Lane is parent company to Washington's Chateau
Ste. Michelle, Columbia Crest, Domaine Ste.
Michelle, Northstar, Saddle Mountain, Snoqualmie
Vineyards and Whidbeys.)
Washington is recognized for its powerful
Cabernet Sauvignons, Merlots and Syrahs, wines
of substance and authority. Oregon is best known
for its elegant Pinot Noirs and Pinot Gris,
wines of delicacy and structure.
Indeed, the landscapes from which they hail are
mirrored in the wines each region produces.
Master of Wine David Lake, who plied his trade
in Oregon before becoming winemaker in 1979 at
Washington's Columbia Winery, draws some
distinctions: "There is a beauty and charm to
Oregon that Washington lacks - it has a much
more Burgundian feel to it. Washington has a
more savage, grander landscape."
Terroir. Microclimate. Call it what you will,
but the simple fact that almost all of
Washington's vineyards are situated inland, east
of the Cascade Mountains, residing in virtual
desert, sets them apart in every way from the
cool, coastal climate of the Willamette Valley.
In his first year as Columbia's winemaker, Lake
produced a huge, dense, backward Cabernet
Sauvignon blend that he labeled Millennium
because he felt it had the stuffing to last
through the turn of the century. He was right. I
tasted it last year, and it has remained an
intense and hefty wine.
In fact, Lake tried to have it both ways. He
made Pinot Noir from Oregon's Bethel Heights
Vineyard (one that he helped plant) from 1984
through 1986, but "they were always sort of
Orphan Annies," he says with some
disappointment. "People didn't understand why
we'd want to be making an Oregon wine in
Washington. It was always a bit awkward."
Pioneer Days
Even from the standpoint of history, the two
states have little in common. Washington's wine
industry was thriving prior to Prohibition. In
the early 1900s, irrigation, made possible by
captured snowmelt from the nearby Cascade
Mountain range, allowed the Columbia Valley to
blossom with a wide range of crops, including
wine grapes.
Pre-Prohibition Oregon, however, was sparsely
dotted with vineyards. Peter Britt, the
photographer, started a vineyard and winery in
southern Oregon called Valley View Vineyards.
Among the few that flourished in the late 1800s
were the Doerner Vineyard near Roseburg, and a
vineyard and winery owned by Frank Reuter in the
Willamette Valley.
Washington and Oregon both went dry in 1917, two
years before Prohibition became national law.
Washington survived, much as California did, by
selling grapes to home winemakers and
sacramental wines to the Catholic Church. In
Oregon, only the Doerner Vineyard outlasted
Prohibition.
When Prohibition was repealed in 1933,
Washington quickly reestablished itself as a
wine-producing state, but Oregon lagged behind
with only a minor spurt of commercial wineries,
most of the fruit and berry sort.
By the 1960s, two large commercial ventures had
emerged in Washington: Associated Vintners,
which would become Columbia Winery, and American
Wine Growers, which today is Chateau Ste.
Michelle.
Resuscitating Oregon's modest wine prospects was
a slower process, but thanks to a few determined
souls, the die was cast by the late 1950s.
At the time, Richard Sommer, a UC-Davis
graduate, was looking for a place to start a
winery, somewhere north of California. "I
studied the weather figures, also the climates
and soils," he recalls, "and then scouted
around. I made some wine from Oregon's Rogue
Valley grapes. And then I found the Doerner
Vineyard in the Umpqua Valley. It had about a
half-acre, mostly zinfandel, and a bunch of
old-fashioned varieties. I made wine out of
those in 1957 or '58."
The exercise proved that even zinfandel would
ripen this far north. "Hedging my bets, in 1959
I planted the first part of our vineyard [to
riesling, zinfandel, cabernet sauvignon,
chardonnay and pinot noir] just over the ridge
from Doerner Vineyard." His Hillcrest Vineyard
produced its first commercial wines in 1963.
"When I tasted that first Riesling, I thought
'Wow!' " It was "much fruitier and more
flavorful" than the California renditions with
which he was familiar.
Sommer's enthusiasm drew others to Umpqua
Valley, where a small cluster of wineries soon
sprang up. It would take a couple of decades
before quality caught up to enthusiasm.
Three years later and 160 miles north, Charles
Coury, David Lett, and later Dick Erath and Dick
Ponzi would follow parallel paths to Oregon's
Northern Willamette Valley to plant cool-climate
grapes, among them pinot noir and pinot gris.
Throughout the 1970s, Washington State's wine
industry grew steadily with Chateau Ste.
Michelle and Columbia Winery as its anchors.
Oregon, meanwhile, staggered along; that is
until the famous back-to-back Paris and Beaune
tastings of 1979 and 1980 in which an Eyrie wine
bested some of Burgundy's finest. That triumph
yielded instant validation, and soon a rush of
individuals, most wanting to produce small
amounts of world-class Pinot Noir, descended on
the Willamette Valley.
Once established, both Washington and Oregon
blossomed in the 1980s, and by the 1990s were
enjoying a bona fide boom. Currently each state
has leveled off at about 170 wineries.
Money Talks
On paper, it would be easy to reduce the
difference between the two states to Big
Business versus Mom and Pop.
Washington, after all, is home to the mighty
Stimson Lane, Columbia Winery and Covey Run
(both recently purchased by Canandaigua), and
Hogue Cellars, all of which have significant
national and international distribution. In
Oregon, only three wineries produce more than
100,000 gallons of wine annually, with
Willamette Valley Vineyards the leader at
205,000 (Washington's Columbia Crest alone
produces about one million gallons per year).
And size makes a difference in more than image.
Both states have lobbying agencies that are
funded by tax dollars derived from wine growing.
By sheer volume, Washington is far better funded
to promote its wines.
But tax dollars alone could not have
accomplished what the contributions of visionary
Allen Shoup, the former president of Stimson
Lane, achieved for the Washington wine industry.
Tactically, he always put the Washington wine
industry first, and Stimson Lane second. Under
his stewardship, he paved the the way for
Seattle to host the bi-annual World Vinifera
Conference, and helped establish the country's
second largest charity wine auction, the Auction
of Washington Wines (formerly the Auction of
Northwest Wines). After nearly two decades as
the architect of the modern Washington wine
industry, Shoup retired last year.
Washington is not only about big winery
conglomerates. Excluding the Stimson Lane,
Canandaigua and Hogue properties, the remaining
165 wineries average about 7,000 cases per year.
Among them, small, boutique wineries, such as
Leonetti Cellar and Woodward Canyon, have done
as much as any other to further Washington's
image.
Oregon, by contrast, is a virtual beehive of
tiny, artisan producers, many turning out as few
as 500 cases per year. Even the "big" names,
such as Eyrie, Adelsheim and Ponzi, produce less
than 20,000 cases per year.
In fact, Oregon winemakers take pride in
starting out and remaining small. "Mom and Pop"
is not a derogatory term here, but an image
eagerly cultivated and well deserved.
The dirty truth
Even if their respective climates, histories and
economies were equal, Washington and Oregon
would still be at polar ends of wine style for
one reason: dirt.
Almost all Washington wine grapes are planted on
desert plateau east of the Cascade Mountain
Range, while most of Oregon's vineyards are west
of the Cascades in rich, fertile valley soil.
From the vantage point of an airplane, the
Columbia Valley is mostly undulating, sandy
brown hills. Here and there are bright patches
of green in very defined and distinct patterns,
often circles, some carved into the contours of
the hills. These verdant parcels mark the
irrigated fields, many of which are vineyards.
Fly over the Willamette Valley and a sea of
plush greenery stretches to the horizon
interrupted only by the blue ribbon of the
Willamette River.
The Columbia Valley vineyards are mostly at
elevations above 1,000 feet (those closer to the
Columbia River dip down to 400 feet) with mostly
sandy, arid soils. Here and there an ancient
riverbed will form a denser, more shallow base.
But by and large, sand is what you get.
(Winegrowers theorize that phylloxera has never
taken hold in Washington because of its sandy
soils -- that and, perhaps, its harsh winters.)
By contrast, the Willamette Valley is an ancient
lake bed with much of its subsoil comprised of
volcanic basalt. Most of the vineyards here are
sited below 600 feet in elevation. The topsoil
varies from shallow to deep, from clay to looser
loam. The best sites need slopes for drainage.
Completing the terroir profiles are climatic
factors. Washington and Oregon are affected
collectively by the larger weather patterns
coming down from the Arctic, or off the Pacific
Ocean (witness El Nińo and La Nińa of a couple
of years ago). For instance, 1993 and 1997 were
cooler, wet years for both states, while 1992,
1994 and 1998 were hotter, drier years. But
beyond that, each state is shaped by its own
radically specific climate.
Although Washington is called a hot climate
zone, it sometimes faces bitter-cold winters.
Every five to seven years, the temperature will
drop to 10 degrees below zero and stay there
just long enough to do widespread damage to the
vines. The last time it happened was January
1996 when 35 percent of the merlot crop was
destroyed. Production was subsequently down by
one-third industry wide. And so, the first
criteria for any wine grape planted in the
Columbia Valley is to be winter-hardy. (The key
reason Washington produces very little zinfandel
is the vine does not like chilly weather.)
And the cold may linger into spring and beyond
bud-break, where concerns of frost damage
continue into May. Large wind machines, which
keep temperatures up by circulating the air, dot
the vineyards in particularly susceptible areas.
On cold nights, one can almost hear the gnashing
of teeth as growers wearily watch the mercury
dip below 40 degrees.
In Oregon, the challenge is rain, which can
result in myriad problems, among them mildew.
Growers here have learned to mitigate its
threat; they have regular spraying regimes, and
are ready to run out and hit the vines with
sulfur after any downpour. Still, it's easy to
get caught off guard and lose a part of the
yield to mildew.
More than rain as a mildew-promoter, the bigger
threat in Oregon is rain at harvest time. At
Wilridge Winery in Seattle, Paul Beveridge makes
big Columbia Valley Cabs and Merlots, but also
turns out a small amount of Oregon Pinot Noir
every year. "In Washington you simply wait
around for the grapes to get ripe," he says,
"but in Oregon, it's always nail-biting time. As
you get closer to ripening, the rains come, then
you ask yourself, 'Do I pick, do I wait?'" The
challenge is in guessing right.
Otherwise good-to-great vintages have been
decimated by early winter rains. In particular,
1984 has taken on a near mythic quality in
Oregon as the most devastating, gut-wrenching
harvest of all. After a relatively normal
growing season, the rains set in about two weeks
before harvest and never stopped. Some growers
were picking at Thanksgiving, desperate for any
kind of maturity in the grapes. More recently,
however, they were blessed with three marvelous,
back-to-back vintages - 1998, 1999 and 2000 - a
highly unusual stroke of luck that Washington
winegrowers also enjoyed.
Rejecting "The Northwest"
Both states have made an impact internationally
for one reason: quality. Oregon's Pinot Noirs
are compared favorably to Burgundy's, and
Washington's Cabernets can stand shoulder to
shoulder with those from California and even
Bordeaux.
But Washington has it over Oregon when it comes
to "fighting varietals" - $10-ish good quality,
varietally correct wines. The state is rife with
excellent Sémillon, Riesling, Gewürztraminer,
Sauvignon Blanc and Lemberger (the blaufrankisch
grape of Austria) in that price range. In
Oregon, it's slim pickin's when looking for a
similarly priced bottle. The very demanding
nature of pinot noir drastically inflates the
cost of its production, and even chardonnay and
pinot gris require more attention here, which
harkens back to the cool climate factor. Oregon
simply cannot ripen fruit at 6 tons to an acre.
Washington, on the other hand, can and does
quite effectively.
There are always exceptions to every rule, and
in Southern Oregon much of the above is untrue.
About one-eighth of Oregon's wine production
currently comes from this region, an area that
extends from Roseburg to the California border,
where warmer climates dominate.
It is so much warmer than the Willamette Valley
that Southern Oregon yields lovely Cabernet
Sauvignon, Bordeaux blends, Syrah, Tempranillo
and Dolcetto, a distinction that causes some
infighting among the state's winegrowers. Many
producers outside of the Willamette Valley
resent the fact that most of the state's
marketing efforts are centered on pinot noir, a
variety that does not fare so well in Southern
Oregon. (If and when a Southern Oregon
appellation is granted, the situation may
resolve itself.)
Both states have made substantial efforts to
distinguish one region from the other, and to
ensure wine quality - Oregon with its
groundbreaking regulations of 1977, and
Washington in 1999 by being the first state in
the union to define the term "Reserve" on the
label.
As American consumers become more savvy about
this country's wine regions - learning the
distinctions between our major appellations just
as they did those of Bordeaux, Burgundy,
Champagne and the Rhône - they will do well to
put the term "Northwest wine" to rest.
The Columbia River Gorge is symbolic of the
combined efforts of the two states, where hot
complements cool; dry, wet; cabernet sauvignon,
pinot noir; sémillon, pinot gris. As Steve Burns
sums up pithily, "What's your fantasy? We'll
fulfill it. You don't need to look any further
than Washington and Oregon."
Just a little closer.
Robert Mayfield, who has been covering the
Northwest wine scene for more than a decade,
publishes The Wine Iconoclast, a monthly
newsletter. |