
Of-course, just for now it is seldom seen, but today it was first seen in Richebourg, Domaine Grivot’s Richebourg to be precise…
Harvests
more hail in the côte de beaune…
I just got off the phone with a grower in Beaune – I’d called to get a bit more information on the flavenscence d’orée insecticide spraying ‘story’ – in the background I could still hear the remnants of the thunder-storm. The temperature was now just 18°C – 1 hour ago it had been well over 30°C – that was before the storm hit.
Like last year, hail has ripped through the vines from Volnay to Savigny; further south I’ve no info yet; further north, the Côte de Nuits experienced only about 1mm of rain and no hail. I’m not sure where the border lay – was it Savigny or Corton? – we’ll know later…
The grower said he called somebody in the vineyards, and the hail on their tractor cab sounded like gunshots. He then drove towards Pommard and said it was like somebody was throwing rocks at his car and the roads were all flooded – there were even fallen trees in the roads. He visited Beaune Grèves and said he was almost frightened to see the quantity of water coming down the vineyards towards his car, all boiling and brown. The scene was apparently apocalyptic, with leaves strewn about the ground. A quick glance in the heavy rain made him think losses could be 50% – he heard from growers in Savigny and Volnay who said 60-90% losses. They are all a bit emotional right now as very many in the Côte de Beaune desperately needed a good volume this year. A better idea of losses will come with the new light tomorrow, and when the emotions have dimmed a little.
I would have added some of the photos that are now filling facebook and twitter – but it just seems too voyeuristic. As for the insecticide discussion, we put that to bed – the leaf-hoppers will anyway have been drowned…
A subsequent note from ‘a man in Aloxe’:
As you know, hail yesterday at c. 4pm was both widespread and intense – almost exclusively in the Cote de Beaune.
I spoke with a few people we work with this morning. In northern Meursault and especially throughout Volnay and Pommard ( serious and widespread in both villages ) , Savigny ( several village plots and Les Lavières ) and the Beaune vineyards ( Beaune Premier Crus – Bressandes, Greves, Les Cents Vignes, Clos des Avaux too ).
Re. the point you raise in Big Red Diary about where the border lay, I would say right about here on north side of Aloxe-Corton. I was in Aloxe-Corton all of yesterday afternoon and we seemed to be on the cusp of the weather with a lot of torrential rain but little powerful hail – our village plot of Les Caillettes is fortunately fine, but behind us further up the hill of Corton there is some damage.
updates form the côtes…

That was a nice view on the in-car map!
The weather in the Côtes has been just about perfect so-far in July – and the forecast is more of the same for at least the rest of the month. Temperatures have been late 20s / early 30s °C, but with a dry breeze, so there is virtually no disease pressure, just isolated instances of a little mildew but without the conditions for it to spread.
There are plenty of bunches on the vines but coulure is causing problems for pinot noir – mainly, but not only, in the Côte de Nuits where flowering was a few days later. Some vines will again deliver low yields because of this, but generally there is optimism for both good yields and quality. Ploughing, ploughing and more ploughing has been the work of late June and July, but more controversially, the mandated spraying of insecticide in the vines of the Côte d’Or is a hot topic locally – whether you are Biodynamic or not! – yet has been little reported. I’ll give you more info later in the week.
Overall, 2013 is ticking along very nicely – let’s keep our fingers crossed! And to keep you occupied a little longer, a modest selection of images from the end of last week:
flowering…

Pic, Caroline l’Estime
I hope I’m not writing this just a little too early, but yesterday and today were forecast to be stormy, and given the awful experience of growers in other places this week we shouldn’t get carried away, yet the hail has so far been absent in the Côtes. No hail, but still 40 mm of rain yesterday, and there was further heavy rain this afternoon too.
As for flowering, I’d already reported the first stirrings at the end of last week – mainly Côte de Beaune chardonnay – but there was already a little flowering pinot on Monday in the warm spots of Beaune and Corton Vigne au Saint – I’m sure there were others too! Today I’ve seen pics of flowering in Morey too, so we might consider the weekend or early next week to be a mid-point in flowering. It seems that those vines that didn’t have shoots ripped away by the wind, actually look to have plenty of flowers, so no yield issues today, but we don’t want 40 mm of rain every day, do we(?)
…that brings some good? floraison…
If Thursday evening brought a few wind-related losses, then Friday delivered the most precocious of flowers: Just one or two were reported by Olivier Lamy in Chassagne, but with the warm weather (we are enjoying!) set to continue, probably much of the Côte d’Or vines will be in flower by the end of this week. There are storms forecast for Wednesday; let us hope that they will be inconsequential!
Anyway, add 100 days to Friday 14th of June, and you arrive at: Monday 23rd September…
(Just saying…)
it’s an ill wind…
Yesterday, late afternoon, and up and down the Côtes was a bit of a storm. No worries about hail, and the rain that fell wasn’t really damaging as the flowers haven’t yet opened – but!
There were heavy gusts of wind on the more exposed slopes, such that the long shoots that haven’t yet been tied down – say 1 metre in length – were often ripped straight from the vines and thrown to the floor. That will sicken those who had been hoping for better yields…
biblical rain & time to taste 40 vintages of montrachet?
Don’t you just love those phone calls? – Here.
And, happily, this comes before we get to flowering:

Picture from Caroline l’Estimé in Chassagne this afternoon
Many roads around Beaune are flooded as we had heavy rain all night: 40 liters/m2 so far..& it's not the end. pic.twitter.com/VX4aksxLSq
— Caroline PARENT GROS (@cparentgros) May 3, 2013
Expecting to be cut off soon. Road to Savigny has washed away and not sure we can access the roads over the hills anymore.
— Jasper Morris (@justjasper) May 3, 2013
This is meant to be my dry stone wall pic.twitter.com/Xnf9fYDn8y
— Jasper Morris (@justjasper) May 3, 2013
budburst!
removing clarity – what’s the story…?
I can but speculate.
But unfortunately this page is not currently in-line for an update.
Sadly, this valuable resource (valuable not just for me I’m sure) currently has no ‘vintage 2011’ update for yields by appellation. I found many aspects of this annual document useful when writing FWOB, and Clive Coates used to use the summary information for every one of his vintage reports, but my contact in Beaune now tells me that ‘the direction no-longer want to make this information public’. Is this to remove any semblance of clarity when it comes to the very low yields of 2012 and whatever pricing they attract? Or some other reason?
Right now it’s hard to say, but it is a retrograde step for any organisation that prides itself on openness, it also leads to ill-informed speculation – just like this…



















