Wines & Vines

March 2015 Vineyard Equipment and Technology Issue

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60 Wines&Vines March 2015 Natural Corks Champagne Corks Twinline Corks Bartops VISION Synthetic Corks G-Cap® Screw Caps Sales Representatives: Chris & Liz Stamp info@lakewoodcork.com lakewoodcork.com 4024 State Route 14 Watkins Glen, NY 14891 607-535-9252 607-535-6656 Fax PIONEER INNOVATOR PARTNER The Brand Most Trusted By Home Winemakers Is Now There For Wineries and now "The solution lifted stains immediately … It performed exceptionally well." Daniel Pambianchi WineMaker Magazine Technical Editor, Author, Winery Owner "Cleaning Agent Performance Study" December 22, 2013 Maker of For All Your Professional Needs. ecologiccleansers.com 608-658-2866 | info@ecologiccleansers.com Like us on wine industry news wine east B oston, Mass.—Nancy Knowles Parker, owner of Greenvale Vineyards in Ports- mouth, R.I., and publisher of the New England Wine Gazette and three other Wine Gazettes, died Jan. 10 in Boston. She and her husband, Cortlandt Parker, planted a vineyard at Greenvale, his family's farm, in 1980 and opened the winery 12 years later. Greenvale Vineyards is now run by their daughter, Nancy Parker Wilson. In 1988, the Parkers' interest in grapegrow- ing and winemaking led them to add a tabloid newspaper, the New England Wine Gazette, to their New Jersey newspaper chain, now known as the New Jersey Hills Media Group. They expanded the Wine Gazettes during the 1990s, adding the Finger Lakes Wine Gazette in 1994, the Virginia Wine Gazette in 1997, and the Long Island Wine Gazette in 2000. At the time of her death, Nancy Knowles Parker was publisher emerita of the New Jersey Hills Media Group, and two of her children— Elizabeth Knowles Parker and Stephen Ward Parker—are co-publishers. The Media Group now includes 17 newspapers and 14 websites. Joachim Hollerith Joachim Hollerith, whose knowledge about and enthusiasm for growing vinifera grapes helped establish the wine industry in Virginia in the 1980s, died in Germany on Dec. 30 at age 61. As a graduate of Geisenheim Institute, Hollerith was hired in 1978 by Dr. Gerhard Guth to develop a vineyard and make German- style wine on Guth's 1,500-acre farm south of Culpeper, Va. During the next three years, Hol- lerith planted 25 acres with high-density vinif- era (primarily Riesling), and Rapidan River Vineyards released its first vintage in 1981. Hollerith left Rapidan River in 1983 to be- come general manager and winemaker for Prince Michel Vineyards and Winery in Leon, Va. Prince Michel Vineyards acquired Rapidan River in 1985, and these two wineries were among the first in Virginia to focus on making wines exclusively from vinifera grapes. After leaving Prince Michel in the early 1990s, Hollerith ran a nursery that sold vines to many eastern vineyards. He moved to Lake County, Calif., and operated American Nursery there for a number of years. More recently, Hol- lerith returned to Neustadt in Germany's Pfalz region, where his family had grown grapes since the 1600s, established the Weingut Joachim Hollerith and specialized in making Pinot Noir. His son Jonathan helps make the wines in Ger- many and also is vineyard manager at Early Mountain Vineyards in Madison, Va. —Linda Jones McKee East Loses publisher and Winemaker Daily Wine inDustry neWs winesandvines.com

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