My timing couldn't have been better as harvest is a beast that few people have the privilege of experiencing. I moved home to train, but also to apprentice under my father, a great winemaker who has taught a number of great winemakers the ropes in the beginning. Having worked harvest since I was 10 I thought I knew the gig, but the fives years spent at University in Santa Barbara racing bikes made me soft. With a Bio degree and lab experience, my responsibilities went far beyond my previous jobs of hauling hose and cleaning all the things. People have asked me what my position is, and the best answer I can give is Principle Gopher; I get things done. I learned to drive a forklift, a not insignificant task which requires four functioning limbs, when I have two that are fully responsive.
In addition to winery duties I helped coordinate harvesting at our vineyards in Arroyo Seco, an AVA close to Greenfield. Nights were spent meeting with machine harvesters and taking grape samples in the dark with the help of a headlamp.
Harvest was: long, exhausting, frustrating, enlightening, and a time of rapid education. People have a romantic idea of a Chateau in France, where wine emerges in a beautiful package. In reality winemaking involves getting stuff dirty and having to clean it.