September 9, 2016 CapitalPress.com 7 LIVE brings added dimension to wine There’s a lot going on at Ayres Vineyard. There are the grapes, of course: 18.5 acres of them, mostly Pinot noir, spilling down a grassy slope overlooking the peaks of the Coast Range. And then there’s the cellar, a pur- pose-built winemaking facil- ity directly adjacent to the vineyard. But this high, south-fac- ing saddle in the Ribbon Ridge AVA just outside New- berg, Ore., is home to more than just a business. It’s also where winemaker Brad Mc- Leroy and his extended fam- ily live — kids, dogs, even in-laws, all making a home among the vines. Their business marks the culmination of a long career in wine, which took McLeroy from his family’s wine shop in Kansas City all the way to the Willamette Valley. “I came ... in the early ’90s, and I loved it. I thought to myself, ‘Oh my gosh, peo- ple live this way?’ So in 1993 I moved to Portland, went to culinary school, and started working at wineries. And my fate was sealed.” Ribbon Ridge AVA is the smallest of the Willamette Valley AVAs, and one McLe- roy says is characterized by drier, warmer conditions and a persistent breeze that keeps mildew pressure down and minimizes frost in the early season. “Daytime temps are a little warmer, so we ripen a little earlier. Some years the faucet comes on in the fall, and it’s nice to get ripened before then.” Those conditions, cou- pled with sandy, clay- and fossil-studded soil, produce a darker expression of Pinot noir characterized by dark fruit, earth, and baking spice components. All of Ayres’ grapes are used in their estate wines. With the exception of a small “fun whites” block, the acre- age is planted entirely to ive different clones of Pinot noir: Dijon clones 3, 115, 667, 777, and Pommard. With the vineyard abut- ting the home where Mc- Leroy and his family live, chemical use is kept to a bare minimum. “We don’t use pesticides or herbicides; this is where my kids and dogs play,” says McLeroy. Ayres is certiied by LIVE, an independent certiication board that promotes wine- growing and winemaking practices that tread lightly on the environment, protect wildlife, and treat workers fairly. Originating in the Wil- lamette Valley in 1996, LIVE relies on science-based stan- dards for viticulture as well as enology, making it one of the only third-party certii- cation program that encom- passes the vineyard as well as the cellar. To maintain his certiica- tion, McLeroy must keep a log of everything he applies to the vineyard, host an annu- al inspection, document any soil amendments, and adhere to a set of industry best prac- tices for human resources. “It might cost a little more to farm this way, but I think it’s Margarett Waterbury/For the Capital Press Pommard Pinot noir basks in the summer sun at Ayres Vineyard. The vineyard drops fruit each year — “a bad business decision” but one that ensures focused, concentrated lavor, winemaker Brad McLeroy says. worth it,” McLeroy says. McLeroy has seen his fair share of change in the Willa- mette Valley wine communi- ty during the past 15 years. “There are some rumblings right now of bigger entities moving in, but you can’t ight change. I’m not going to say the party’s full.” But McLeroy isn’t too concerned about the com- petition, at least not in an immediate sense. “Family is irst and foremost for us. We’re just going to keep our heads down and sell the next vintage.” Wine Supplies for Everyone! Beginner or Professional! • Hoses • Fittings • Presses • Tanks • Yeast • Nutrients • More! 503-742-1711 www.dwinesupplies.com 1819 NE Baker St., McMinnville, Oregon 97128 V16-4/#7 By MARGARETT WATERBURY For the Capital Press V16-4/#8