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All posts by Eero Teerikorpi

High Quality Vineyard Management

You may recall my post from about a year ago describing the disastrous 2024 season we experienced due to some very questionable vineyard management at NOET Vineyards. There were simply too many issues to repeat here, but if you’re interested in the details, please feel free to look up my earlier post.

In short, the outcome was heartbreaking. In 2024, our harvest came in at only about 400 lbs, compared to an average of roughly 2,000 lbs in prior years. Even more painful was the drop in quality—the grapes were noticeably below the standard we had come to expect for our double-gold-winning wines.

For the 2025 season, we reached out to Coastal Viticulture (https://coastalvit.com), who had managed our vineyard in earlier years. They had previously stepped away from the Lamorinda area due to conflicts with some vineyard owners, a decision made at the time by Dylan, who is no longer with the company. With Bryan now leading operations, I was able to convince Coastal Viticulture to return and help heal our vineyard.

What a difference a year can make.

I honestly did not expect such a strong and rapid recovery. It turns out our vines are remarkably resilient, and with proper care, they flourished once again. In 2025, we achieved a record-breaking harvest of over 2,400 lbs—and remarkably, this was accomplished with little to almost no irrigation.

Bryan at Coastal Viticulture is currently open to taking on additional clients in the Lamorinda area. If you are looking for professional, thoughtful vineyard management, I can highly recommend their services based on our experience.

Eero Teerikorpi @ NOET Vineyards (eero@teerikorpi.com)

Vineyard Management Matters – Disastrous 2024 Harvest

NOET Vineyard had a lovely run from 2015 until this year. We have had a very robust vineyard from the beginning, with our first harvest being 500 lbs of Cabernet Sauvignon grapes just one year after planting the vines in early 2014. The harvest grew to 1,100, 1,600, and 2,000 lbs in subsequent years, and it has held steady between on or about 2,000 lbs per harvest ever since.

Our vineyard was initially managed by Sal Captain and was taken over by CVC after Sal decided to focus on his vineyard. Unfortunately, for reasons you may all know, in early 2024, CVC decided no longer to provide their services to the Lamorinda area.

That was very unfortunate indeed and very costly for us. The vineyard manager we chose was not up to the task. Several issues did not go right. The initial pruning was a deviation from the cane pruning, and there were way too many branches left in each vine; the spraying conducted during the summer was sub-par, and the canopy management was done incorrectly, leaving a lot of grapes exposed to direct sun, resulting raisins.

Since our vineyard benefits from the Moraga Gap and we get a lot of fog, we have not needed to water our grapes that much over the years, only a few times during the summer. One could argue that we did not give our grapes enough water this year. But since our neighbor, Captain Vineyards, tends to have a similar limited watering regime and their Cabernet harvest in 2024 was normal, that most likely was not the main issue but could have contributed to the results.

Since we were traveling a lot during the summer and had earlier learned to trust CVC in management, we did not expect this to happen. Unfortunately, we realized the full scope of the damage too late in the summer to be able to do anything about it.

The result was a significant amount of powdery mildew and raisins. We had to drop over 3/4 of the harvest, and we were able to collect only about 400 lbs of grapes.

This was a hard lesson to learn. We can only blame ourselves for not being more proactive about our vineyard and its management. We will be much more careful in the future as we consider any help we need on our vineyard.