It only took us since the beginning of the internet…
From John, August 29th, 2011Hell-o new WEB site for Cameron Winery! We have been working on you for a while now but finally you are ready to reveal yourself.
What you will NOT get on this web site is an ability to purchase wines directly from the winery because we are intent on devoting our time and talents to growing grapes and making wine and leaving the selling part to far more able people in the world of retail. Therefore, you will quickly note that when you click on buying wine, you will be connected to a list of links for retail outlets that carry our wine. If you are a retail outlet in an out-of-state market that carries our wine and you do not find a link to you on this web site, please alert us to that fact and we will put you on!
The new Web site is primarily intended to be informational (and entertaining…in fact sometimes more entertaining than actually informational!). You will note that we are maintaining vineyard and cellar photo galleries and blogs regarding everything that goes on at Cameron Winery (this will include reports on the goats, chickens, geese…Fois and Gras, our honey bees, Guido…the winery policeman, and the human component, as well as the more mundane aspects of growing grapes and making and aging pinot noir, chardonnay, and more!).
There might be occasional videos along with the changing photo gallery and I guarantee that there will be new things to learn whenever you check on this site. Your comments are always welcome, even if they are not appreciated!
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The ICE Age
The agricultural sector of our country absolutely relies immigrants to produce the food that we eat and the wine that we drink. At Cameron we rely on the Latino workforce to accomplish many of the tasks in our vineyards. We simply cannot do it all ourselves. From pruning to pulling leaves around the fruit to harvesting in the Fall, they are a vital part of the process. And without them we will not exist.
There’s More... >The Plague
Phylloxera, an aphid which feeds on grapevine roots and leaves, is a plague that occurs in nearly all viticultural regions around the world. Read on to understand how and why this pest was first introduced and how it is managed today.
There’s More... >Winter Chores
Now that wines from the just-completed vintage are resting in their barrels, we turn our attention to the vineyard, to blending and to bottling.
There’s More... >