Friday, June 7, 2019

Integrity can be contagious

                                                   

The following is an excerpt from a reader's hopeful letter:
    There is no way not to notice the lifestyle marketing of wine that has taken over advertising, online and beyond (and which bears not a small resemblance to some form of fraud).  It has reshaped communities left and right and asserted a very smothering to to my eye an odd vision of luxury that drowns out other values such as hard work, knowledge, quality, and more.
    I hope that the better wine makers and enthusiasts are preparing new generations and have thoughtful proteges...  The greatest thing [winemakers] can do is to light a spiritual fire where one can and encourage people to pick up the training they need to become the stewards of the next generations. In our drive to create monuments to ourselves we lose sight of our better contributions. The better stewards aren't always who we expect. They could be from the environmental community or from the distribution community, or even an outcast from the USDA who falls out of favor with the administration.

   Napa ultimately may have more value for wine makers across the country who decide that what works for their communities is some other model, and who are somewhat more isolated from the lure of big money. As you have said, there is a discerning clientele forming across the United States. 

2 comments:

  1. Hope you have seen the wild fires in Sonoma - clearly, something is wrong in wine country. Los Angeles Times, today: "he fire comes two years after a series of blazes devastated Santa Rosa and other wine country communities, leaving dozens dead and thousands of homes lost. The Tubbs fire of Sonoma and Napa counties, which started in October 2017, killed 22 people and eventually destroyed more than 5,000 homes."

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  2. From CBS, today: "Approximately 2,000 people were being evacuated in the Geyserville area and in the hills east of Geyserville, said Sonoma County Sheriff Mark Essick, who added his office recognizes the emotional and stressful nature of the current situation, just two years after the wine country wildfires that devastated the region."

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