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- <text id=92TT2110>
- <title>
- Sep. 21, 1992: Trouble at the Roots
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Sep. 21, 1992 Hollywood & Politics
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- AGRICULTURE, Page 61
- Trouble at the Roots
- </hdr><body>
- <p>New strains of a louse are chewing up California's finest
- vineyards, but that could lead to better wines someday
- </p>
- <p>By John Elson - With reporting by David S. Jackson/Rutherford
- </p>
- <p> In Napa and Sonoma counties, heartland of California's
- $730 million-a-year wine industry, prospects are promising for
- a bumper harvest this fall. Beneath the deceptively lush
- surface of the peaceful vineyards, however, an expensive
- disaster looms. Billions of microscopic parasites called
- phylloxeras are munching away at the roots of the grape-bearing
- stalks. While no threat to human health, within a decade the
- tiny insects could eat their way through 50,000 acres of the
- nation's finest vineyards. Estimates of the total damage,
- including the cost of replanting with Phylloxera-resistant
- stalks, range from $500 million to more than $1 billion.
- </p>
- <p> That is the bad news. The good news is that the crisis
- will force growers to replace their diseased vines with new,
- better quality grapes that can flourish in the region's wide
- range of microclimates, which feature coastal fog as well as
- baking heat. Some unprofitable and marginally successful
- varietals will probably disappear, at least in Napa and Sonoma.
- But vintners insist that they will soon be able to produce more
- of the premier wines consumers want--notably Chardonnay and
- Cabernet Sauvignon.
- </p>
- <p> This is not the first time grape growers have fought this
- burrowing louse, which is indigenous to North America east of
- the Rockies. In the late 19th century, phylloxeras somehow
- spread to vineyards in Europe and California, devastating more
- than 2.5 million acres in France alone. What finally brought the
- plague under control was the discovery that classic European
- varietals like Chardonnay could be successfully grafted onto
- native American rootstalks that resisted the voracious bug.
- </p>
- <p> In rebuilding the American wine industry, growers tested
- a number of rootstalks. A majority settled on a variety called
- AXR#1 because it suited California's conditions so well, even
- though it was not totally immune to the phylloxeras. In 1979 a
- Napa County farmer noticed that his vines were thinning out and
- called in experts from the department of oenology at the
- University of California at Davis. They concluded that the
- phylloxeras had mutated into a new, prolific biotype that
- threatened all AXR#1 rootstalks. Reproducing asexually, one
- insect can spawn a billion offspring annually.
- </p>
- <p> In California as well as in Washington and Oregon, where
- phylloxeras have also been spotted, the lice feed on roots as
- deep as 6 ft. beneath the soil, leaving them susceptible to soil
- fungus and other infections. Roots under attack become swollen
- and deformed; eventually the vine and its grapes shrivel and
- die. Says Ed Weber, a Napa County viticultural adviser: "It
- looks like someone took a blowtorch to them."
- </p>
- <p> The University of California has set up a Phylloxera Task
- Force, but no chemical treatment has proved effective against
- this new biotype, and experts cannot rule out further
- mutations. In fact, another strain of the louse has been found
- in central California and as far south as Santa Barbara. For
- farmers the safest solution is to rip out their AXR#1 and
- replant with one of a dozen or so other rootstalks that appear
- to be more resistant to the mutations, at least so far. After
- replanting, it takes three years for a vine to produce mature,
- harvestable grapes.
- </p>
- <p> The expense of replacing rootstalks may drive some
- vineyards into bankruptcy. And with land costing as much as
- $50,000 an acre, the survivors will have to practice a form of
- economic triage in deciding what grapes to grow. Robert Parker
- Jr., America's leading wine critic, recently praised a dry
- Sonoma white made from a relatively cheap and underrated
- varietal called Chenin Blanc. But Michael Martini, winemaker at
- the family-owned Louis M. Martini vineyard, predicts that Chenin
- Blanc will disappear from prime acreage in Napa and Sonoma
- counties, along with such other marginal varietals as
- Gewurztraminer, Johannisberg Riesling and Gamay Beaujolais. "The
- price of land is too high to grow those crops," he says. "You
- can't get your money back." Martini, which once produced 26
- different wines, will soon have only 10.
- </p>
- <p> While the less profitable varietals may survive elsewhere
- in California, Napa and Sonoma growers will concentrate on the
- big-money crops: primarily Cabernet Sauvignon and Chardonnay,
- but also Pinot Noir, Sauvignon Blanc, Zinfandel and Merlot.
- Replanting also means that growers can take advantage of new
- theories about draining and trellising to plant more vines per
- acre without diluting the grapes' character or intensity.
- "We're in the crucible right now," says James Allen, president
- of Napa's Sequoia Grove Vineyards, "but when we come out of it,
- we'll be light-years ahead of the French."
- </p>
- <p> Some vintners foresee 1995 and 1996 as the worst years of
- the crisis, when a drop in production will lead to a rise in
- retail prices, particularly for premier whites. After that, more
- prolific vines and keener competition could result in lower
- prices for better wines. If that proves true, oenophiles may
- someday want to toast the little pests that ate the vineyards.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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