Title: Cooper Mountain Vineyards
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2Facts
- 100 Estate Grown Grapes
- First Vineyard planted in 1978
- 17,000 cases production
- Family Owned Winery
- Pinot Noir, Pinot Gris, Chardonnay, Pinot Blanc
and soon Tokai (2008 Vintage)
- 100 Organic Biodynamically Farmed
- Carbon Neutrality Focus
3The Vineyards
- 120 acres planted as Vineyard.
- 50 acres of land other than vineyards.
- 4 Vineyards
- Grabhorn
- Meadowlark
- Farmington
- Johnson School
4Cooper Mountain Geology
- Cooper Mountain was formed by the ancient
Columbia River basalt flows that shaped the
landscape over millions of years. The fluid lava
flows originally covered much of the Northern
Willamette Valley with a nearly level surface up
to 100 feet thick in places. The subsequent
folding, fracturing and uplifts of this lava
layer has formed Cooper Mountain and the Chehalem
Mountain. Multiple layers of the basalt can be
observed with the Grabhorn and Meadowlark
Vineyards. These layers have differing
characterics due to the degree of fracturing, as
well as different rates of weathering. The
uppermost basalts, which are part of the Grande
Ronde sequence of flows, are typically more
fractured or cracked than flows at lower
elevations. This network of fractures permits
surface water to percolate down through the
bedrock more quickly in some blocks than in
others.
5Grabhorn Vineyards
- Location of winery and tasting room
- West Side of Cooper Mountain
- Vineyard Designations
- Pinot Noir Old Vines
- Pinot Noir Mountain Terroir
- Pinot Noir Reserve
- Pinot Gris Old Vines
- Chardonnay Old Vines
- Chardonnay Reserve
6Grabhorn Vineyard planted in 1978
617 feet
Insectary Plants
Chardonnay E 1.12 ac.
Pinot Gris F 0.68 ac.
Pinot Noir H 1.84 ac.
Pinot Noir G 0.23
Insectary Plants Buffer Zone
Pinot Noir G 0.17
Pinot Noir B North 0.94 ac.
Insectary Plants
Insectary Plants Buffer Zone
590 feet
Chardonnay C 2.32 ac.
Pinot Gris D 1.20 ac.
588elev.
Pinot Noir B South 1.26 ac. 554 elev.
Insectary Plants
7- 40 acres planted in 1982
- East Side of Cooper Mountain
- Vineyard Designation
- Pinot Noir Meadowlark
- Pinot Noir Mountain Terroir
- Pinot Noir Reserve
- Pinot Gris Reserve
- Chardonnay Reserve
8Meadowlark Vineyard Mapping and Topography
9Johnson School Vineyard
- Plantation made from 1998 to 2004
- Chehalem AVA
- 3 varietals Pinot Noir, Pinot Gris and Tokai
- Vineyard Designation
- Pinot Noir Reserve
- Pinot Noir Mountain Terroir
- Pinot Noir Johnson School (2009 Vintage)
- Pinot Gris Reserve
- Tokai (2008 Vintage)
- Pinot Noir Life
10PN A
3.10 acres 94 clone 14
PG B
1.22 ac.
PN D
349 elev.
3.6 acres
PN C
9.05 acres Clones 15 777
PG E
PN J
177 elev.
4.95 acres
3.95 acres
Tokai 1.7 ac.
PN K 0.74 ac.
Tokai 0.84 acre
PN IH 4.06 acres
PG G 2.8 acres
Johnson School
11Johnson School Topography map
12Farmington Vineyard
- Planted in 1995 thru 1998
- 20 acres vineyard
- Pinot Noir, Pinot Gris, Pinot Blanc and
Chardonnay
- Alluvium Soil
- Designation
- Pinot Noir Cooper Hill (1998 Plantation)
- Pinot Noir Reserve (1995 Plantation)
- Pinot Gris Cooper Hill and Reserve
- Pinot Blanc Vin Glace and Harmony
- Chardonnay Reserve and Harmony
13Farmington Road
PG UPWEST
2.69 acres
Chard.
PB
1.02 ac.
0.95 ac.
3.43 acres
PG Down
PG DOWNWEST
2.66 acres
PN OLD
1.88 acres
PN YOUNG
4.998 acres
PN Single
Farmington Vineyard
14Organic Vineyards
- Conventional viticulture relies on man-made
chemicals for fertilization, weed and pest
control.
- Organic vineyard programs are prohibited from
using synthetic substances throughout the year.
- Organic Certification Prohibits the use of
Genetically Modified Materials from the soil to
the wine.
- Weed Killers????? Human and equipment and
Biodiversity
15Biodynamic Vineyards
- Biodynamic farming involves the use of Organic
concept but with the important notion that there
is the
- need to go beyond solely the chemical and
biological point of view. Biodynamic farming
involves the use
- of forces.
- We all know that the moon plays an effect of the
force of gravity. If the moon plays this role, it
becomes logical that the solar system plays also
a role even if you cannot - physically visualize the action. Also, the earth
via Magnetism must be considered as a force and
- therefore shall be included on the reasoning.
- In conclusion, Biodynamic practice involves
- Astronomy position of the planet plays a role
on the time of preparation, spray, pruning,
harvest, etc
- Homeopathy Dilution of preparations
- Geology Magnetism acknowledgement
16In Practice
- In practice, Biodynamic farming is performed by
the use of some
- preparations.
- The basic role of these preparations are
- To release the energy to the soil and plant
- To make a bridge between the forces and the soil
- To balance the whole farm by creating an
healthier environment.
17The Biodynamic Preparations (BD)
- The preparations should not be seen as a
substance but as a force.
- We use Nine preparations. The BD500 and 501 are
sprayed separately. The BD502-507 are mixed
together at the time of the compost preparation.
- BD 500 Horn manure Stimulates root growth and
humus formation. We usually spray at the
- beginning
of fall
- BD 501 Horn Silica Stimulates and
regulates leaf growth. Usually spray in growing
season just
- before or
at bloom.
- BD 502 Yarrow Permits plants to
attract trace elements in extremely dilute
quantities.
- BD 503 Chamomile Stabilize Nitrogen within
the compost and increase soil life
- BD 504 Nettle Stimulates soil
health, providing plants with the individual
nutrition components
- needed.
"Enlivens" the earth (soil)
- BD 505 Oak Bark Provide healing forces
in order to combat disease.
- BD 506 Dandelion Stimulate relation
between Silica (Si) and Potassium (K) so that
Silica can
- attract
cosmic forces to the soil.
- BD 507 Valerian Stimulate compost so
that phosphorus components can be fully used by
the
- soil.
- BD 508 Horsetail Prevention or control
of disease.
18Winemaking
As required by Federal Standard, the Cellar must
be certified Organic even if the wine is labeled
Made with Organic Grapes. As required by Demete
r for the Biodynamic Certification, the cellar
must be certified Biodynamic.
19Organic Cellar
- Just like our vineyards, the winery is certified
by Oregon Tilth. Ultimately this means in the
cellar the following practices are controlled
annually by the USDA for quality control - No Genetically Modified Organisms products
- Total Sulfites cannot exceed 100ppm's (50 less
than conventional wines)
- Any additional ingredients such as "sugar" have
to be certified organic
- All products used for cleaning inside the winery
must be biodegradable products like Iodine and
Chlorine are strictly prohibited
- Any Yeast nutrients (used during the
fermentation) must contain ONLY Organic nitrogen
- Processing aids used and even stored in the
winery must be listed in the National Organic
Product List
20Biodynamic Wine Authentic Wines
- Must be from Biodynamic Grapes
- Native yeast and bacteria for fermentation
- Maximum 100 ppm Total SO2 added from the primary
fermentation to the bottle
- No acidification allowed
- No chaptalization allowed
- No corrective additions allowed
- Must be certified by Demeter USA
21Organic Wine
- As mandated By the National Organic Program
organic wine must contain less than 10ppm of
Sulfites.
- Cooper Mountain Adds Sulfites to all of our
wines except our Life Pinot Noir
- In the Life Pinot Noir we have been working
on replacing the role of S02 additions by
increasing the level of antioxidants that occur
naturally in the grapes. The natural antioxidants
essentially become the preservative in the wine
and makes the reliance on sulfite additions
obsolete. Recent analysis have demonstrated the
higher level of antioxidants in our current
Life Pinot Noir.
22Q What are the differences in winemaking
between a conventional winery and a Organic
Certified winery?A See the table below. If
you read on the label of a wine bottle Made with
Organic Grapes , then the winery is required to
follow the rules described below.
If you read on the label of
a wine bottle Biodynamic Wine, the winery must
comply to the described rules.
23- 7 Rules of Our Vineyard Management
241) Vineyard Heritage
- If a vineyard is properly maintain, the vines can
produce grapes up to 90 years
- All our decisions are based on this primary
factor treat the vines for the future
generation.
252) Water Management
- Irrigation is prohibited in our vineyard
- The vines need to adapt to the macroclimate and
by refusing any type of irrigation, we are
training them to stress and fully utilize the
quantity of water available to them
263) Prevention vs. Repression
- In emphasizing high quality manual work in the
vineyards, we reduce the risk of vine unbalance
by 80
- treating is seen as a failure, preventing is
success
274) Disease the Domino Effect
- Mildew, mites, botrytis, etc You name it. Some
are fungus, some viruses and some insects. Any
treatment made will have an impact on the disease
but also on positive elements. Our concept is any
application of organic fungicides needs to be
limited and counter balanced by a natural
approach such as homeopathic remedies.
285) The Law of the Minimum
- We follow the law of the minimum. This principle,
created by Carl Sprengel in 1928, states that
growth is controlled not by the total of
resources available, but by the scarcest
resource. This concept was originally applied to
plant or crop growth, where it was found that
increasing the amount of plentiful nutrients did
not increase plant growth. Only by increasing the
amount of the limiting nutrient (the one most
scarce in relation to "need") was the growth of a
plant or crop improved.
296) Homeopathy
- the most important part
- the use of Homeopathy remedies is essential in
the Biodynamic approach
- the concept applied at Cooper Mountain Vineyards
is based on isolating each block with their own
entity. The remedies will be spraying (20 gal H2O
plants diluted at 30x) on the canopy in order
to prevent any unbalance and therefore diseases
307) The Wines
- The wines are telling us the story of our
vineyard.
- Every lot will be tasted and noted in order to
- assess the quality of our vineyard management
but
- also, in order to anticipate any possible issues
- coming in the next five years. The wines are the
- mirror of our work.
31Carbon Neutrality-Why?
- In 1978 when owner Robert Gross planted his first
vine it was not Merlot, nor Cabernet. In fact he
left Washington State and traveled South to
Oregons Willamette Valley in pursuit of the holy
grail of varietals Pinot Noir. It is that very
reason that over 300 winemakers have scattered
amongst the valley today. All pursuing the same
dream, all relying on the cooler weather
patterns, all to grow Pinot Noir. However the
threat of climate change through global warming
could drastically alter the landscape of grape
growing in the Willamette Valley. Experts agree
that one of the first industries that will
affected by global warming will be the wine
industry and hence it is our duty to lead the
agricultural business to neutrality. During wine
production wineries emit carbon dioxide(CO2) that
ultimately contributes to global warming.
However Cooper Mountain is slated to reduce our
greenhouse gas emissions to zero by early 2009.
32Greenhouse Gas Emission Sources in a Winery
Operation
- Mobile Combustion-fuel consumed by winery owned
vehicles
- Stationary Combustion-Hot Water Heaters
- Waste Disposal onsite-Paper or Paper board,
metals, plastics, glass, lees, vineyard wood
pruning, vineyard leafy waste, etc
- Fugitive Emissions-greenhouse gas emissions that
arise from leaks from sources like refrigeration
units
- Vineyard emissions-fertilizers with nitrous
oxide, Soil Cultivation, row cropping
sequestration
- Winery Fermentation
- Purchased Power
33How to Become Carbon Neutral?Mitigation for a
Winery Operation
- No winery can become completely carbon neutral
- The Goal is to lower your Carbon Emissions as low
as possible
- To lower Carbon Emissions Cooper Mountain is
implementing
- A.) purchasing renewable energy
- B.) Bio-diesel
- C.) Retrofitting Electrical outlets
- D.) Internal Energy conservation techniques From
Recycling Waste to more energy efficient tractor
usage
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