September 9, 2016 CapitalPress.com 9 Old is new at Illahe Winery By GAIL OBERST For the Capital Press The steady clip clop of mules’ hooves announced the arrival of a stagecoach haul- ing wine to the banks of the Willamette River in Indepen- dence, Ore. It was the next-to-last leg in the journey to deliver Illahe Vineyards’ 1899 Pinot noir, a wine made using mostly 1899-era tools and technolo- gy. The last leg to the distrib- utor was a three-day trip in canoes bound for Portland. Once there, a bike messen- ger pedaled the wine to the distributor. In all, the wine was transported nearly 100 miles from the vineyard to Portland by horse, carriage, canoe and bike. “We’re keeping it as real as possible,” said Brad Ford, part-owner and winemaker at Illahe. This is the second year the 1899 Pinot noir has trav- eled by canoe. Both years, the journey began two years earli- er in the vineyard eight miles west of the Willamette River. There, in the vineyard-strewn hills above Dallas, the best clusters were hand-picked and hauled to the winery’s crush- pad by Bea and Doc, two Per- cheron draft horses. The Percherons help haul all of the varieties in the 52- acre vineyard, not just the 1899 Pinot noir. This year, the 1899 Pinot noir makes up about 200 cases of about 10,000 released at Illahe Vineyards. After hand-sorting and de- stemming the grapes, they are pressed in a hand-operated wooden basket press before they are moved into wood barrels for fermentation. At every step of the winemaking process, there were modern conveniences to deconstruct. A tiring bucket brigade of staff and volunteers helped rack the juice from the press to the fermenting barrels, work done by electric pumps today. Last year, Ford in- vented a bike-powered pump that “could have been used in 1899,” had someone thought of it, he said, assisting the bucket brigade. Even stainless steel, which was invented in 1911 and since then has been the winemaker’s friend, was exchanged for 19th centu- ry-style wood fermenters. No yeast was added. In- stead, in the old-timey way, the wine gathered up native yeasts from the air of the win- ery. The Pinot noir spent two years in barrels before being bottled and packed down the hill in a wagon pulled by Bea and Doc. Once bottled, the wine was hand-corked and dipped in wax, then hand-labeled. Are all modern con- veniences shunned? Ford shrugged and admitted that some couldn’t be undone. His winery has electric lights and modern plumbing, for ex- ample. He didn’t disconnect them for the 1899 Project. But each year he subtracts another modern convenience. This year, he put the wine on Gail Oberst/For the Capital Press Mules haul Illahe’s 1899 Pinot noir to the Willamette River, where it will travel by canoe to Portland. Gail Oberst/For the Capital Press Brad Ford, winemaker at Illahe Vineyards, prepares Percherons Doc and Bea for their trip down the hill to the labeling room. For the second year, Illahe made a small batch of Pinot noir using only 1899 technology. a mule-pulled stagecoach to get it from the winery to the River. Next year, he has a plan to eliminate the ever-present plastic picking and hauling buckets. With help from the local high school ceramics class, he’s building a kiln on the property, and hopes to be- gin using pots made on site. Whether the wine is worth the effort and the $65 price tag per bottle is up to the critics, but the increase in production and attention says something. Illahe made 75 cases released in 2013. The 1899 Pinot noir will be available for sale at the winery, 3275 Ballard Road, at Carmella’s Wines in Portland, and at a few other shops. In- formation is at http://illa- hevineyards.com. Row Mulch Spreaders For All Growers Whatcom Manufacturing’s Mulch Spreaders are specifically engineered for fast, easy and precise mulch application. Whether it’s for moisture evaporation, weed control, amendments for enhancing soil tilth, the Whatcom Manufacturing Mulch Spreader saves time and money. Created with your needs in mind, they are available in multiple sizes with numerous options and features. They are built to accommodate all applications using mulch, sawdust shaving, manure, solids, gyspum, organic compost, wood chips, etc. Buy ory t c a F ct Dire AVE! S and • Wineries • • Tasting Rooms • • Crush Facilities • • Barrel Storage • Whatcom Manufacturing Inc. Lynden, WA 360-354-3094 www.whatcommfg.com info@whatcommfg.com 503-668-7211 or 855-668-7211 www.WSBNW.com • Sandy, OR V16-4/#24 V16-1/#8