2 CapitalPress.com Friday, April 8, 2022 People & Places Climatologist takes over family vineyard and winery Established 1928 Capital Press Managers Joe Beach ..................... Editor & Publisher By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press ROSEBURG, Ore. — Though he’s no longer a full-time climatologist, Greg Jones hasn’t stopped poring over weather data. Most of his research is now focused on the 76 acres surrounding Abacela Win- ery near Roseburg, Ore., giv- ing Jones a small-scale per- spective on the global climate phenomena he spent decades studying as an academic. “It’s the joy of doing field work,” Jones said. “The day- to-day is the most rewarding.” As a renowned wine clima- tologist, Jones has long been crunching numbers to deter- mine the climate’s effect on vineyards and winemaking. He most recently worked at Linfield University in McMinnville, Ore., after two decades at Southern Oregon University in Ashland. Wealth of information Since taking over opera- tions at Abacela last year, he’s been collecting and analyzing temperature, precipitation and soil moisture data to make on-the-ground decisions. “Here, I get to do all that and actually act on that infor- mation,” Jones said. “There’s a wealth of information to act on.” The winery annually pro- duces about 14,000 cases from 15 grape varieties growing on the property, which is equipped with three weather stations, 24 tempera- ture sensors and 40 soil mois- ture sensors. “With all that, you can tell I’m a data geek,” he said. Jones still plans to “dab- ble” in academic research, focusing on the way rising temperatures are likely to impact various grape-grow- ing regions around the world. Climate impact nuanced While climate change studies often deal in the cat- astrophic effects of increased heat and extreme weather, the implications for viticul- ture are more nuanced. “It’s getting better in many places but it’s getting challenging in other places,” he said. “There’s a lot of adaptive potential in that Anne Long ................. Advertising Director Carl Sampson .................. Managing Editor Samantha Stinnett .....Circulation Manager Western Innovator GREG JONES Occupation: CEO of Abacela Winery, wine climatologist Age: 62 Family: Wife, Liz, and grown twin sons, Adam and Curtis Hometown: Roseburg, Ore. Mateusz Perkowski/Capital Press Greg Jones, CEO of Abacela Winery in Roseburg, Ore., is also a wine climatologist who studies the global impacts of climate change on viticulture and winemaking. framework.” Regions that were once on the “margin” of being able to successfully grow wine grapes, such as Oregon’s Willamette Valley, have been able to more consistently produce quality fruit. While Pinot noir is the valley’s staple variety, some grape growers are also trying cultivars traditionally associ- ated with warmer climates, such as Tempranillo, Syrah and Merlot. “Many people in the Wil- lamette Valley are expand- ing beyond the cool climate potential,” Jones said. As time goes on, viticul- ture is likely to expand into new regions — for example, British Columbia in Canada may someday become a wine powerhouse on the order of West Coast states, he said. “There will be oppor- tunities for many people, clearly,” Jones said. Areas where temperatures are already high or that are struggling with insufficient or unreliable irrigation water, on the other hand, may find it harder to economically pro- duce wine. Regions commonly asso- ciated with specific wine varieties may also run into marketing problems if climb- ing temperatures force grow- ers to replace them with dif- ferent cultivars. “If Burgundy had to grow something other than Pinot, would people recognize it? Probably not,” Jones said. Reliable data on the tim- ing of plant life cycles show that bud break, flowering and grape maturity are occurring earlier than they did histor- ically, ultimately resulting in higher sugar levels and degraded acids in the fruit. “The plants have told us the climate has changed,” he said. Grape quality has gen- erally improved in many regions but the effect of ris- ing temperatures changes some key factors, Jones said. More sugar equates to a higher alcohol level, while reduced acid can render wine less “lively” when paired with food. However, these impacts can be offset by removing alcohol and adding acid, he said. “Wine makers can play with that a little bit.” Family interest Though Jones took a cir- cuitous route to become a climatologist, his interest in wine was sparked early in life by his father, Earl Jones. As a medical doctor in the San Francisco Bay area, the elder Jones took his young family on field trips to the then-na- scent wine regions of Napa and Sonoma. At one point, they even spoke to a man working on a building who turned out to be the famed winemaker Robert Mondavi, who was construct- ing his winery. Initially, though, Jones was more drawn to the restaurant industry than to a career in science as a young man. He worked as a chef in California and Colorado throughout his teens and 20s. “Becoming a chef, I had to understand wine,” he said. “That’s where my whole wine connection started.” Due to the late nights and long hours, Jones eventually “burned out” on the restau- rant industry and started a golf equipment company. Eco- nomic problems in the late 1980s hurt the golf industry, convincing him to go to col- lege at the age of 29. His original goal was to study hydrology and become a water manager but he real- ized that there was a demand for climatological research in the wine industry. His father, who was plan- ning to invest in a winery and vineyard, was regularly pep- pering Jones with questions that required delving into such data. After studying the effects of climate on the Bordeaux region of France for his doc- torate, Jones graduated from the University of Virginia with a Ph.D. in the mid-1990s — just as his father was developing the Abacela vine- yards and winery. Wine and climate “The further I got into the data, the more it became apparent the climate was Education: Bachelor’s degree in environmental science from the Univer- sity of Virginia in 1993, Ph.D. in environmental science from the Univer- sity of Virginia in 1998. Entire contents copyright © 2022 EO Media Group dba Capital Press An independent newspaper published every Friday. Capital Press (ISSN 0740-3704) is published weekly by EO Media Group, 2870 Broadway NE, Salem OR 97303. Periodicals postage paid at Portland, OR, and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: send address changes to Capital Press, P.O. Box 2048 Salem, OR 97308-2048. To Reach Us Circulation ...........................800-781-3214 Email ........... Circulation@capitalpress.com changing,” he said. “Climate change had to be included in the models for the models to work.” Jones took a job at South- ern Oregon University in the late 1990s but it was at an international geological con- ference in 2003 that his career as a wine climatologist really took off. He was widely quoted in articles in the mainstream and scientific press about wine and climate change, leading to speaking engagements and research assignments around the globe. “This is something we all know. We all know wine to some degree,” Jones said of the interest in his research. “That’s what connected me to people all over the world.” In 2017, Jones was hired by Linfield University to develop its wine education program, which he oversaw until 2021 when he stepped in as Abacela’s CEO upon his father’s retirement. Climate change is going to transform the global wine industry, but in a sense, that’s nothing new — winemakers have always been modify- ing and upgrading their pro- cesses, he said. “If you’re not adapting, you simply wouldn’t be in business,” Jones said. Main line .............................503-364-4431 News Staff Idaho Carol Ryan Dumas ..............208-860-3898 Boise Brad Carlson .......................208-914-8264 Western Washington Don Jenkins .........................360-722-6975 Eastern Washington Matthew Weaver ................509-688-9923 Oregon George Plaven ....................406-560-1655 Mateusz Perkowski .............800-882-6789 Sierra Dawn McClain ..........503-506-8011 Designer Randy Wrighthouse .............800-882-6789 To Place Classified Ads Telephone (toll free) ............800-882-6789 Online ............................CapitalPress.com Subscriptions Mail rates paid in advance Easy Pay U.S. $4 /month (direct withdrawal from bank or credit card account) 1 year U.S. ...........................................$ 65 2 years U.S. ........................................$115 1 year Canada.....................................$230 1 year other countries ...........call for quote 1 year Internet only.............................$ 52 Visa and Mastercard accepted To get information published Public Lands Foundation honors Idaho aquifer recharge manager The Public Lands Foun- dation has honored Wes- ley Hipke, recharge pro- gram manager for the Idaho Water Resource Board and state Department of Water Resources. The foundation presented Hipke with a Landscape Stewardship Certificate of Appreciation. He manages the board’s Eastern Snake Plain Aquifer recharge program. He has worked to develop the program since 2015, when the Idaho Legis- lature began funding devel- opment and construction of recharge sites across the plain in the state’s eastern and south-central regions. The state aims to return about 250,000 acre-feet of water to the Lake Erie-sized aquifer each year. The aquifer was over- drawn by about 200,0000 acre-feet annually before the program began, according IDWR Wesley Hipke, recharge program manager for the Idaho Water Resource Board and state Department of Water Resources. to the department. Causes of its decline over decades included business and res- idential development and usage, and improved irriga- tion delivery systems that leaked less. Hipke, board staff and irrigation districts and canal companies have developed about 10 recharge sites. Many are on U.S. Bureau of Land Management ground. He and staff researched and designed sites and proj- ects, and worked with BLM urday-Sunday. Website: https://bit. ly/36o2wMD stock Hall of Fame will honor its newest inductees on April 12 at the Turf Club during the organization’s 61st annual banquet. Those induct- ees to be honored this year are: cat- tle producers Guy and Sherry Colyer of Bruneau, sheep producers Don and Patricia Pickett of Oakley, for- mer Idaho State Brand Inspector Larry Hayhurst of Nampa and dairy- man John Reitsma (posthumously) of Jerome. The banquet will open with social time at 6:30 p.m. fol- lowed by dinner at 7 p.m. Tickets for the prime rib dinner are $30 and can be reserved by calling Eric Ben- nett at (208) 320-5769. and others to secure approv- als. They also worked with irrigation districts and canal companies to modify sys- tems as needed. Building the sites fairly quickly helped recharge vol- ume exceed the annual goal four straight years, the board said in a release issued by the foundation and BLM. Recharge continues to aid the aquifer even as reduced water supply and drought the last two years pushed volumes below the state’s annual target. The board said depart- ment hydrologists docu- mented the return of 1.8 mil- lion acre-feet to the aquifer over the program’s first five years. Restoring it to sus- tainable levels will require a long-term strategic effort. “Watching this program develop from afar, we are impressed with the partner- ship between Mr. Hipke, the water board and the BLM for working together to cre- ate aquifer-recharge sites across the Eastern Snake Plain to ensure the long- term sustainable health of one of the largest freshwa- ter aquifers in the West- ern United States,” said Mary Jo Rugwell, Public Lands Foundation president. “Everyone in Idaho under- stands the value of restor- ing the aquifer to sustainable levels.” “The importance of this effort cannot be overstated for the future of Idaho,” said Codie Martin, who nomi- nated Hipke for the award and manages the BLM Sho- shone Field Office. Martin said aquifer health has “tremendous positive implications for the BLM’s multiple-use mission and resources including wildlife habitat, ecosystem health and vigor, livestock grazing, outdoor recreation, wildland fire and wild horse herds.” THURSDAY-SATURDAY APRIL 14-16 assortment of high-quality oral and silent auction items. Website: http:// www.owaonline.org/auction Free Waste Pesticide Collection Event in Roseburg: Douglas County Fairgrounds, 2110 Frear St., Roseburg, Ore. The Oregon Department of Agriculture through the Pesticide Stewardship Part- nership is sponsoring a Free Waste Pes- ticide Collection Event. This event is an opportunity for landowners, farmers and other commercial pesticide users to rid storage facilities of unwanted or unused pesticide products. Registration for this event is required by April 1. Contact: Kath- ryn Rifenburg, 971-600-5073, kathryn. rifenburg@oda.oregon.gov Website: https://bit.ly/3AdxFgp CALENDAR Submit upcoming ag-related events on www.capitalpress.com or by email to newsroom@capital- press.com. THROUGH SUNDAY MAY 1 2022 Wooden Shoe Tulip Fes- tival: Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm, 33814 S. Meridian Road, Woodburn, Ore. Experience the beauty of 40 acres of tulips and over 200 acres of outdoor space and activities this spring. We are again offering tick- ets online only this year to minimize crowds and allow for more time to enjoy our fields. Hours: 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday-Friday; 8 a.m.-7 p.m. Sat- THROUGH SATURDAY APRIL 9 2022 Idaho FFA State Conven- tion: College of Southern Idaho, 315 Falls Ave., Twin Falls, Idaho. More than 1,400 FFA members from around Idaho will gather for this year’s convention. Website: https:// bit.ly/3J2JAB1 TUESDAY APRIL 12 Southern Idaho Livestock Hall of Fame Induction: 6:30 p.m. Turf Club, 734 Falls Ave. Twin Falls, Idaho. The Southern Idaho Live- Spring Fair: Washington State Fairgrounds, 110 9th Ave. SW, Puy- allup,Wash. Celebrate spring at the fair and all things agriculture. Web- site: https://www.thefair.com SATURDAY APRIL 16 Oregon Women for Agriculture Auction and Dinner: 5:30 p.m. Linn County Expo Center, 3700 Knox Butte Road E, Albany, Ore. Oregon Women for Agriculture is excited to host our annual Auction and Dinner returning in-per- son this year! Make plans to attend for a fun-filled evening of socializing, shar- ing delicious food and bidding on an Mailing address: Capital Press P.O. Box 2048 Salem, OR 97308-2048 News: Contact the main office or news staff member closest to you, send the information to newsroom@capitalpress.com or mail it to “Newsroom,” c/o Capital Press. Include a contact telephone number. Letters to the Editor: Send your comments on agriculture-related public issues to opinions@capitalpress.com, or mail your letter to “Opinion,” c/o Capital Press. 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