Our Vineyards


 
 

Our Vineyards

Where it all begins

Our 200 acres of estate owned vineyards are the foundation for our winery.  Fundamentally, the family understands that great wines begin in the vineyard.  This philosophy is an ideal marriage for winemaker Bill Knuttel, as he spends most of his time in the vineyard.  Each harvest Bill can be found walking vineyards, row by row, to ensure that the grapes are ripening perfectly.  Bill’s meticulous approach to vineyard management allows him to use the highest quality grapes for our wines.  After all, a wine can only be as good as the fruit in the vineyard.  If the fruit is bad there’s a pretty good chance the wine won’t be very good either.   Utilizing careful viticultural practices and maintaining long term relationships with growers all contribute to producing our world-class wines.

 

Endeavour Estate Vineyard

 


Meet Duff Bevill

Our Vineyard Manager

Duff Bevil

Duff Bevill

 

Our vineyard manager,  Duff Bevill,  is equally passionate about the notion that great wine starts in the vineyard. With more than 20 consecutive years of hands-on experience managing both our estate and contract vineyards, Duff is a big reason our wine quality remains consistently excellent.

Because a commitment to vineyard diversity is the cornerstone of our winemaking philosophy, Duff Bevill has the formidable challenge of maximizing fruit quality from each of 12 different vineyards-including 10 individual estate properties. For more than two decades, he has acquired knowledge about even the most subtle differences between vineyard and how fine-tuning viticultural practices brings out the best from each.  In May 2006, Duff was awarded with the prestigious Viticulture Award of Excellence from the Sonoma County Grape Growers Association.


Appellations & Terroir

The right grape in the right place

Vineyard diversity forms the cornerstone of our winemaking philosophy. Sonoma County’s vast array of growing conditions allows us to satisfy our desire to define varietal type by discovering varietal-specific growing conditions. To ensure a measure of control in this regard, we farm multiple vineyards within ten separate estate-owned properties that total approximately 200 vine acres. For example, the Dry Creek Valley is the keeper of our hearts for Sauvignon Blanc, Zinfandel and, more recently, the Bordeaux varieties. Our passion for wine, though, often causes us to connect with the Russian River Valley for cool-loving grapes like Chardonnay.   For  our  Chenin  Blanc,  Clarksburg,  in  the Sacramento Delta, satisfies us with precisely balanced fruit. Our family owned vineyards provide approximately 65% of the overall production at Dry Creek Vineyard. Additional fruit is sourced from vineyards managed by long-term contract growers.

 
Appellations & Terrior

DCV7 Vineyard adjacent to the winery

 

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Sustainable Farming

A leader in the industry

A fourth generation descendent of a California farming family, Don Wallace has been the driving force working to implement sustainable farming practices at Dry Creek Vineyard. His efforts and direction have established Dry Creek Vineyard as a leader in the movement in Dry Creek Valley and the industry as a whole.
 

Sustainable Farming

Raptor perches in the vineyards

 

Our commitment to sustainable agriculture and minimal off-farm consumption is multifaceted. Advancements in viticultural technology go hand-in-hand with respectfully managing our space on this planet. Our ultimate goal is to turn our vineyards over to the third generation in even better condition than they are today. To do this, we employ a number of strategies. Growing cover crops like clover and bell beans rebuild depleted soil by releasing bound nutrients in the soil, minimizing the need to import fertilizer. Cover crops also reduce erosion because they work as bank stabilizers, attracting beneficial insects that help balance the insect population.

In addition,
we use the most state-of-the-art vineyard equipment and strategies available today. From soil mapping and data gathering by way of global-positioning satellites, to analyzing the soil makeup with weather stations to more accurately determine when sulfur applications are necessary, we  employ whatever technology we can to make sound vineyard decisions.

In
the end, we are constantly pushing for techniques that will benefit the quality of wine at Dry Creek Vineyard and the quality of our lives and those of future generations. Whether it’s Regulated Deficit Irrigation (RDI) to conserve water or raptor perches in the vineyard, our goals are always the same: make better wine and create a better place to live and work.

 
     
     
     


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©2006-2011 Dry Creek Vineyard
3770 Lambert Bridge Road, Healdsburg, CA 95448
800-864-9463