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Mount Eden’s
estate vineyards began to be developed
in 1945 by the legendary vintner Martin
Ray on a rugged mountaintop in the Santa
Cruz Mountains. Today, the site consists
of 40 acres of low-yielding Chardonnay,
Pinot Noir, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot
and Cabernet Franc vines. The Chardonnay
and Pinot Noir were propagated from
selections brought to California by
French winemaker Paul Masson, while the
Cabernet Sauvignon came from Emmett
Rixford’s historic La Questa Vineyard in
Woodside, California. Mount Eden is
considered to have the longest lineage
of Chardonnay and Pinot Noir in North
America.
Planted in infertile Franciscan shale,
the vineyards are 15 miles from the
Pacific Ocean and enjoy a cool, but
sunny climate above the fog line.
Harvest normally begins in the first
weeks of September and finishes around
the end of October, occasionally going
into early November. The combination of
a long growing season and naturally low
yields allows slow, steady maturation of
the grapes and the concomitant
intensification of their flavors. This
process is enhanced by vertically
training the vines to maximize the
exposure of the grape clusters to
sunlight and by thinning the crop, when
necessary, to ensure yields do not
exceed two tons per acre.
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