Mother Nature just won’t give French vineyards a break
French vintners just don’t seem to be able to catch a break.
Mother Nature has been very, very bad this season to winemakers in Bordeaux, Burgundy, Champagne and Alsace, the country’s most prestigious wine-growing regions.
A violent hailstorm on July 23 wiped out a big portion of the Côte-d’Or in Burgundy, according to the newspaper Le Monde. “The section between Beaune and Pommard is the most touched, with 90% loss, and the hills between Pommard and Volnay with 70%,” the paper quotes Jean-Louis Moissenet, president of the Winemakers Syndicate of Pommard, as saying.
Photos show grapes split open and crushed by the hailstones. Last year, Moissenet lamented, he had 60% less than a normal harvest, and this year it will be more like 70 or 80% less.
“It’s just as catastrophic in Savigny-lès-Beaune,” Caroline Chenu, president of that commune’s winegrowers syndicate told the newspaper. She has 40% to 50% losses, and as much as 80% in the vineyards most affected. The storm touched all of the Côte de Beaune.
Then last week, hailstorms battered southern Alsace vineyards, with up to 60% losses, according to the British wine magazine Decanter. Some hailstones reportedly were the size of ping-pong balls, wreaking havoc on vines.
“Hardest hit were vineyards along the plains of Turckheim and Colmar,” Paul McKirdy, cellarmaster at Zind-Humbrecht, told reporter Panos Kakaviatos. Grand Cru vineyards on the slopes -- such as Zind-Humbrecht’s famous “Brand” vineyard, which suffered about 20% loss -- were less affected.
In Bordeaux, a series of storms starting in late July has chateaus in the Médoc scrambling to repair damage to roofs, trees and vineyards. The hail was capricious, damaging some estates, sparing others.
Wine Spectator reported that on Aug. 2, during the second storm in a week, “almost 30,000 acres of vines in the Entre-Deux-Mers, St.-Emilion and Castillon regions were damaged, half almost completely, in a hailstorm that lasted just minutes. Vines were stripped bare of leaves and grapes, the wood shredded.”
Total losses are estimated to be more than $133 million in an early tally, Wine Spectator reported. Devastating, when you consider that so many wineries, especially the smaller ones, are already in difficult straits. Wine producers there are pushing for disaster relief.
According to the region’s Sud Ouest newspaper, the vineyards most affected were the smaller appellations -- bordeaux supérieur, entre-deux-mers, côtes-de-castillon, where wines cost between 2 euros (about $2.65) wholesale to 7 euros retail. There, the effects of the hailstorm will be felt not just for this harvest but for years after.
In Champagne, Wine Spectator talked to Jean-Baptiste Lecaillon, cellarmaster and associate director of Champagne Louis Roederer, who said a succession of storms over five days in late July, with strong winds and lots of rains followed by hail, has damaged between 10% and 20% of the vineyards in Cramant, Chouilly and part of Avize. In some communes, the topsoil was swept away by torrential rains.
And the season is not over yet.
ALSO:
Wine country travel: Two Central Coast wine events coming up
Watch the animated trailer for Heston Blumenthal’s new cookbook
NakedWines.com: Crowdfunding indie winemakers the Kickstarter way
More to Read
Eat your way across L.A.
Get our weekly Tasting Notes newsletter for reviews, news and more.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.