Wine?

I recently purchased a vineyard in southern France.

I possess no knowledge of the measurement of time taken to grow, harvest the grapes and conseuquently wine.

If someone could educate me on the process i would be very much obliged.

By: Joe

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10 Responses to Wine?

  • jo says:

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    i cannot help you sorry

    but i do drink wine

    and i have to say chilean wine is the best you can buy

    yummy yummy yummy

  • Great Gazoo -AM- says:

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    If you really just bought a vineyard, you need to go hire someone that knows how to run it and learn from them. In about five years you can probably go out on your own.

  • David says:

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    Take all the grapes you harvest and eat them, your **** will make excellent wine.

  • Mike says:

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    Yeah . . . .

    So you’re just into pissing money away and you have none left to hire true winemakers and grape growers, so you turned to Yahoo Answers to get your 3 paragraph crash course?? In that case, I just cloned a dinosaur in my kitchen . . . . Woo Hoo!

    What happened to your Cambridge acceptance to get a law degree and your other promising future as a doctor???

    I call B.S. on this one!

  • marbledog says:

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    The Great Gazoo is right. Don’t expect to make a profitable vineyard out of what you can learn online or out of a book. Hire an experienced viticulturalist to manage the vineyard and winery for you. You can pick up the skills and knowledge over time.

  • Abigale_25 says:

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    Why would you purchase a vineyard… if you know nothing about grapes. That’s just amazing to me, Good Luck.

  • kerry k says:

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    Growing grapes, talk to the area farmers, for making wine, the grapes need to be pressed to get the juice out of them, then a yeast needs to be added so that the yeast, a small “critter” can eat the sugars in the grape juice, and “pee” out alcohol as a waste from them into the solution. At about 10% by volume, there will be enough alcohol to kill most of the little critters, and then it needs to be treated to kill any left over. A visit to a distillery would be a great start to become acquainted with the complete process. What you might want to do is make a contract with a local distillery to manage the vineyard for you, thus relieving you of the work to grow and produce the wine yourself. There might already be a distillery waiting to hear from you with that thought already in mind.

  • MrM says:

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    Ho boy….Yikes!

    You need a vine master, my friend.

    The French have been developing their wine development process for millenia, especially in the South of France. I’m talking ancient Rome here….!

    You need to consult a vine master or hire a vinyard consultant to show you what varieties you should grow.

    If you have a history of your property and know what’s been grown there before…then grow that!

  • deogie says:

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    You purchased a vineyard in France and know nothing and are now on Yahoo Answers?

  • zipp380 says:

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    i hope you like potatoes

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