Grapes are being harvested early worldwide
The harvest comes when the fruit is ripe. This occurs at the end of summer for grapes. So the harvest is not currently under way in places where spring is arriving. Such places include South Africa and Australia.
Vitis vinifera is currently harvested in the Northern hemisphere. You have other options for obtaining wine grapes. I’ll talk about them in the upcoming guide to making your own wine starting in a week.
Harvesting is very hard work and is labor intensive.
The Northern hemisphere shows grape harvest about two or three weeks earlier than usual. In Western Europe this is not because the summer was sunny and dry like in 2003. It was not. “In 2007, the whole season was early, right from the budding, because of the mild winter and spring” said Luca Vietti, winemaker at the Vietti winery, in the Piedmont (as reported by the Wine Spectator).
Harvest in the first half of August only concerns some white grapes. The regions where vintners began harvesting in the first half of August are:
- In the USA: the Napa Valley in California;
- In France: Alsace and Roussillon;
- In Italy: Lazio, Veneto and Trentino.
Other websites show recent reports on the current harvest: in California, in Texas, in North Carolina, in New York, in France (there and there), in Italy, in Germany. The present post is the first in a series on the grape harvest. The series will end with a snap view of the 2007 vintage. Your feed reader will be automatically updated of the posting if you subscribe.
Don’t believe mentions of a good vintage yet: it’s too early to address this fuzzy concept: wait until the wine is made! Still we already know that it will be very difficult for even expert winemakers to make good wine in the following parts: Texas, Bordeaux, Puglia and Sicily.
Later articles on the vintage are here:
- Oregon, Burgundy and Bordeaux vignerons explain harvesting and winemaking;
- The 2007 vintage would be bad in Europe.
Tags: concept, French wine, generalization, grape harvest, italy, mild winter, napa valley, northern hemisphere, Piedmont, puglia, sicily, US wine, vintners, vitis vinifera, white grapes, wine, wine spectator, winemaker, winemakers

September 8th, 2007 at 9:02 pm
Your account makes it seem as if the problems were in the Southern regions. Is there a pattern?
September 8th, 2007 at 9:09 pm
That’s an interesting idea, Zubair!
Let’s wait for climate science to enlighten us on the subject. What I understand is that indeed Southern climates bring their problems in terms of low acidity or of various diseases. Yet the local situations are very much different as reported in the linked articles.
November 14th, 2007 at 10:14 am
[...] Reports of bad grape growing conditions in the USA, Germany, France and Italy. [...]