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by Antonia Allegra If reading vine leaves in a wine glass could be as "visionary”
as tea leaf reading, one might say that the future looks positive for the
St. Helena Public Library and Wine Library's fledgling
vineyard. Today, the vineyard backing the St. Helena Public Library and Wine
Library appears more like a field of sentinels, with vine stakes erect out
of the sand-and-rock soil. Take a walk along the 91-vine
vineyard or view
it through library windows. Beyond the vineyard, you'll see Mr. St. Helena,
home and inspiration to author Robert Lewis Stevenson in his Silverado
Squatter days. Chances are good that a jack rabbit will leap across your
view. Arid you'll see water towers that encircle fringes of neighboring
land; they may have been here when original vines were planted in the 1800s. Members of the Wine Library Board have been instrumental in making
this vineyard bear (eventual) fruit. Board members Allen Price, Robert
Lamborn, Julie Dickson and children's librarian Leslie Stanton realized that
although proposed landscape plans for the northeast side of the recently
expanded library called for trees, what the sandy, rocky soil yearned for
were vines. When it carne to aligning the vine stakes professionally, the
legendary vineyard specialist Laurie Wood assisted in arranging the work. Allen Price suggested dedicating the
vineyard to the anonymous generations who planted the site between 1882
arid 1945. During that time in early St. Helena, Prohibition and
pre-urbanization, St Helena residents of Italian arid Mexican descent
thought nothing of lining their front yards with edible gardens of vines and
vegetables to feed their families. Harvesting the resultant wine and meals
was a part of daily life in the Napa Valley for those with "purple
hands and feet." A few of those early vineyards remain in town, such as
the Quaglia Vineyard. The new little vineyard has been informally
dubbed “Barney’s Backyard,” recognizing Bernard Rhodes, first
President of the Wine Library Association (in 1965) and current Board
member. Its vines are based on St. George stock and are grafted with 90%
Petit Sirah and the rest Carignane and some Zinfandel grapes. Historically, this vineyard blend is called “mixed blacks,"
according to Carolyn Martini, whose family winery will eventually make the
wine from these grapes. "It may take ten years to yield enough grapes
to make a barrel of wine," says Bob Lamborn. The grapes from this
vineyard will not bear commercial vintages. Rather, the wine will be
proprietary to both the Wine Library and the Public Library and will be used
to participate in local fundraising endeavors and municipal hospitality. A toast to purple hands and feet! Antonia Allegro is a food and wine
author and editor. Her book Napa Valley: The
Ultimate Winery Guide (Chronicle Books.) is in its third edition
since its publication in 1993. She was the founding editor of Appellation
Magazine, the food editor of the San
Diego Tribune and continues to work with writers and professionals in
the wine and food fields in her role as a career and writing coach. . She
lives in St Helena and is a member of Friends of the Library. |
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