Daily Press

Exceptiona­l wine on the West Sonoma Coast

- By Eric Asimov

ANNAPOLIS, Calif. — At Peay Vineyards, 53 acres of vines on a ridge near this tiny town just 3.5 miles from the Pacific Ocean, the fog generally burns off by around 9 a.m. and the air begins to warm up. By midday, a breeze starts to blow, ruffling the leaves of the towering redwoods and getting stronger until the fog rolls in again in the late afternoon.

This is part of the challengin­g viticultur­al life in the northern part of the West Sonoma Coast, which in May became the newest official American wine appellatio­n.

If the name sounds oxymoronic — it’s not as if there’s an east Sonoma coast — it’s testimony to the gerrymande­red nature of American Viticultur­al Areas, as wine appellatio­ns in the United States are formally known.

The new designatio­n was created after years of debate to distinguis­h the area along the coast from the vast area encompasse­d by the original Sonoma Coast appellatio­n. When that appellatio­n was establishe­d in 1987, it stretched absurdly eastward to areas so far away from the coast that the ocean had little influence on the climate.

So it was that West Sonoma Coast was establishe­d, to denote the area actually along the coast, stretching from the Pacific 5 to 7 miles inland, north to the Mendocino County border and south to the Petaluma Gap, another ocean-influenced American Viticultur­al Area.

The new appellatio­n includes three subregions: the area around the towns of Freestone and Occidental to the south; Fort RossSeavie­w in the center; and Annapolis in the northern reaches of the appellatio­n near the Mendocino border where the Peay brothers

in 1998 planted the first substantia­l commercial vineyard in the Annapolis area.

For Peay Vineyards, the new designatio­n comes as an acknowledg­ment, if not exactly vindicatio­n, that the area they pioneered 25 years ago offers distinctiv­e qualities shown transparen­tly in their wines, primarily complex, polished pinot noirs; savory syrahs; fresh, intense chardonnay­s; and smaller amounts of vibrant Rhône whites.

“The wine, the quality in the glass vindicates our gamble to grow grapes out here,” said Nick Peay, who, with his wife, Vanessa Wong, and brother, Andy Peay, are the three proprietor­s. “The AVA just helps communicat­e to the wine-buying public, gets them to try the wine, gets the wine into their glass. The wine can speak for itself.”

The area along the coast

is completely different from inland areas that still qualify for the greater Sonoma Coast appellatio­n, generally cooler in the days, warmer in the nights and wetter. But even within the appellatio­n, the conditions in the subregions vary considerab­ly.

Fort Ross-Seaview, to the south of Annapolis, is partly defined by elevation. Vineyards must be

920 feet above sea level or more, effectivel­y putting them above the fog line. The higher altitude means it’s generally warmer there, with earlier harvests than around Annapolis, which is lower in elevation and cooler by daytime.

Back in the mid-1990s, when the young Peay brothers decided they wanted to plant a vineyard and make wine, they were something of an anomaly. They had grown up in a suburb of Cleveland in a wine-loving family, but Andy had no experience

growing grapes or making wine. Nick had worked for a small winery that bought grapes from all over the Santa Cruz Mountains.

What’s more, neither wanted to make the sort of powerfully fruity, sometimes overripe, high-alcohol California wines that were increasing­ly in vogue in the late 1990s.

“We were looking for a cooler place than anywhere else,” Andy Peay said. “The theory Nick had was, if we could find a place where we didn’t struggle against the beautiful California sun, we could make wines that were fruity but had other aromatics as well.”

They decided, Andy Peay recalled, to look for ridges in the coastal mountain ranges, places where cool air could penetrate from the ocean but where they had at least a little protection from the fog.

“We drove around in pickup trucks, looking for rivers and low spots and other things that might indicate fog, like lichen and moss on fence posts and trees,” Andy Peay said. “Ferns would tell you water was trapped in soils.”

They finally found a promising site near Annapolis, an old sheep farm and apple orchard. “The old-timer had a spiral notebook and kept a daily log of temperatur­es and precipitat­ion,” he said.

“We saw how the temperatur­e changed through the season. It had quite a high average precipitat­ion, but it’s California so we don’t get rain in the summer.”

In 1996, they bought 280 acres 600 to 800 feet in elevation.

The brothers began planting the vineyard in 1998, primarily with pinot noir, which, before the movie “Sideways” sent the popularity of pinot noir soaring in 2004, was something of a risk. They planted smaller amounts of chardonnay and syrah and tiny quantities of viognier, roussanne and marsanne.

It would be a few years before they’d have enough grapes to make wine.

Nick took on the role of farmer. Andy would handle marketing and sales. In 2001, in time for their first vintage, Wong, an experience­d winemaker, joined the team. She has made every vintage since.

The West Sonoma Coast region has blossomed in the past 30 years, beginning in the more southern areas with Summa Vineyard and Coastlands Vineyard near Occidental and Hirsch Vineyards, Fort Ross Vineyard and Flowers Vineyards around Fort Ross. The Annapolis area followed. Vineyards in the area now include Hartford Court, Campbell Ranch, Goldrock Estate, Ridgetop Vineyard and more.

Peay’s initial wines were not in the dominant style of the time. They were intense without being heavy or fruity, and taut and refreshing with lively acidity. The aim, Andy Peay said, was to show the characteri­stics and potential of the vineyard in wines that were intended to go with food. That required him to sell the wines virtually by hand.

Over the past 20 years, the stylistic pendulum of California winemaking has swung in Peay’s direction. Tastes are far more diverse, and the Sonoma Coast has come to be known as a source for fresh, balanced wines, though that depends as much on the intent of the producers as on what vineyards can offer.

After 20 vintages, the Annapolis area is still a challengin­g place to make wine. Immigratio­n rules and the difficulty of living in the area make it hard to attract vineyard workers. The Peay winery is inland, in Cloverdale, where the 2021 vintage is aging in barrels, because it would have been too expensive to build a winery at the vineyard.

Wong’s winemaking has gotten more precise over time. In good vintages Peay now makes several different pinot noirs, syrahs and chardonnay­s, a viognier and a blend of roussanne and marsanne (if these two ripen enough for a wine). In addition, they have a second label, Cep, for wines made from purchased grapes that sell for about half the price of the Peay wines.

In 2020, drifting smoke from forest fires forced the Peays to make just 500 cases of their estate pinot noir rather than the usual 2,000. A spring frost this year on May 8 killed an estimated 10% of the crop. The local waterway, the Wheatfield Fork, which empties into the Gualala River, was already dry in June.

Nobody said life working on the West Sonoma Coast was easy. The fog keeps rolling in and the wind will blow. But the wines are worth it.

 ?? BRYAN MELTZ/TH E NE W YORK TIMES ?? Nick Peay, from left, Andy Peay and Vanessa Wong are seen on June 21 at Andy’s home in Piedmont, California.
BRYAN MELTZ/TH E NE W YORK TIMES Nick Peay, from left, Andy Peay and Vanessa Wong are seen on June 21 at Andy’s home in Piedmont, California.

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