Posts in Vineyard to Vintage
The Wine is Fine
John Manion, Winemaker Extradronaire at Domaine de Manion, French Country Living

John Manion, Beloved Husband, Winemaker Extradronaire, VP Liquid Assets

It starts with sunlight, a good grape varietal, blessed terroir, knowledge to bring it together, and a lot of help from our friends and family! Viola, a wine that is fine!

Our backyard vineyard idea was a landscape solution to begin with. Could we really grow a pretty vineyard to look over, that would have four season interest, be drought tolerant, and maybe yield a good grape for a nice wine. A grand experiment that luckily has worked out well, and ultimately created a nice lifestyle for us at Domaine de Manion.

We use to enter a lot of home wine competitions, and did well with medals and awards. Later, my husband, John, was even asked to judge some of these competitions. With judging duties and the pandemic, we stopped entering our wines.

This spring for fun, we entered two of our wines in the 2022 Orange County Fair Home Wine Competition. We were surprised when we received a Gold Medal for our Syrah 2020 and a Bronze Medal for our Syrah Rosé 2021. We knew our wines were drinking well. It reinforces we are managing the vineyard well, and doing right by the grapes. John is a great winemaker, and he has a nice style with his wines.

Hail to the winemaker! The wine is fine!

Related Past Posts:

Hail to the Winemaker

Surprise at the Orange County Fair

Anticipating One’s First Grape Harvest

Bon Appétit et Bon Weekend…Bonnie

Vigorous Vines Growing

Vines Now Nearly Hiding “Coop de Manion”

The last time I mentioned our vineyard, Prepping the Vineyard, it was March and pruning had just finished. In a few months time, the vines have exploded in growth. In fact, you can hardly see the chicken coop through the vigor of the vines.

Vines Before In Spring After Pruning

I often joke that grapevines are like weeds, and they are. Besides all this growth vigor, the vines are flowering and tiny grape clusters are forming. It looks like it is a good fruit set for this year.

Grapevines Flowering

I really enjoy how the vineyard looks in the spring. The vines are a lush vibrant green, full in canopy, stretching for the sky, and basically happily unbridled.

Rows of Happy Grapevines at Domaine de Manion

Now as the vineyard marches toward harvest, the grapevines get down to business further maturing in canopy, growing the grape clusters, verasion or coloring of the grapes, and the ultimate ripening of the grapes in sugar brix for harvest.

It has been fun sharing the vigor of our vineyard. Is there something in your garden that explodes with vigor that you look forward to each year?

Bon Appétit et Bon Weekend….Bonnie

Prepping the Vineyard

Spring Prepping the Vineyard

I mentioned previously a few weeks ago, all of the spring sprucing I was doing in the garden. Well, my husband, John, and I have also been doing some sprucing in the vineyard, and prepping for the year ahead. It can be a big chore, but also very rewarding. Time well spent now means a continued healthy vineyard and a successful harvest in the fall.

Vines have been pruned back to their two cordon arms. Vineyard rows have been mowed twice already to keep weeds low and at bay. I have tried sowing cover crops a few times between the rows, but have been unsuccessful most likely because of low winter rains. The vines have drip irrigation at each plant, but no irrigation in the rows.

For one reason or another, our grapes last harvest were beautiful, but half of our normal yield. I heard and read that most of California vineyards had lower than usual yields. It could also have been very little winter rains, high winds at flowering, etc. Many factors could have played into it.

I have added compost to our vines before, and thought it might be a good time to add some rich compost to them this year. While I am doing my flower beds, let’s do the vineyard too!

This year I added and mixed in three generous shovels of compost to the base of each grapevine to add back organic nitrogen. Compost has amazing qualities to benefit soil and plants. See below for my many related past posts on composting. I am composting year-round, but with the quantity to cover each grapevine, I bought a yard and a half of compost from Agriservice El Corazon in Oceanside. It helps if you have a truck, or access to a truck, although Agri Service El Corazon delivers too. If interested in delivery services, please visit their information online, and call them for more details.

Adding Rich Compost to Each Grapevine Base

I have been composting for a very long time on our property. When you have chickens, it is almost a necessity. Chicken manure is “green gold” and not to be wasted. It is a perfect green to add to your compost bin besides your kitchen scraps, and landscape greens. It is a hot manure however, and will burn your plants if it not aged and broken down into compost with your other ingredients.

I add compost mixed with my soil for every plant, tree, and vegetable bed I plant. Compost adds back valuable nitrogen, and has about ten fantastic attributes. Compost is also very dark and adds a dressy look to your flower beds and around your landscape.

For composting tools, products, and services, please look into what your local city offers. You might be surprised.

Related Past Posts on Composting:

Ten Ways Composting Benefits Your Soil

How to Compost in Your Backyard

The Green Way to Lose a Lawn

Bon Appétit et Bon Weekend…Bonnie

Autumn in the Vineyard

Sunset Over Domaine de Manion

I have taken you through a whole year in our vineyard. Winter, Spring, Summer, Harvest, and now Autumn. The grapes are in, the vines are slowly going dormant and turning beautiful fall colors. Light frequent rains, have already transformed the vineyard floor into a verdant carpet. If you look closely you can see that the grapevines almost mirror the spectacular color of a recent sunset. Yellow, orange, red, tawny, leaves give a spectacular visual display before soon dropping to the ground and starting the process all over again for next year. Like life, each year is different, and full of surprises. It is a time of reflection.

At this moment, I would like to “thank all of you” who read this blog, and so many who have reached out to me, in person and online, about the information shared, great recipes, or tip they gleaned in one of the posts. If you have friends who might enjoy it as well, you can sign them up on my website homepage, bonniejomanion.com or email me and I can sign them up.

I am very thankful and grateful for your kindness and support. Blessings! Merci beaucoup!

Bon Appétit et Bon Weekend….Bonnie

Home Stretch to Harvest
Happy Grape Clusters Ripening

Happy Grape Clusters Ripening

I am always amazed at the vineyard from winter to spring to summer, and now to fall and the ensuing transformation of buds to fruit clusters on the grapevines. It is almost time to harvest at Domaine de Manion. Vintages each year are just like children, and years of your life, each one is always different, and unknown to the outcome.

I am simply going to leave you with one of the most memorable quotes on wine by Galileo Galilei, “Wine is sunlight, held together by water.”

It means that wine is the perfect combination of it’s terroir, natural rainfall, and perfect amount of sunlight.

May this year’s vintage be outstanding and remarkable at Domaine de Manion! Salut!!

Bon Appétit et Bon Weekend….Bonnie

Grape Clusters Forming
Grape Clusters Forming

Grape Clusters Forming

After the grapevines flower, the grape berry clusters being to form on the vines. Still immature and green, the berries will continue to gain in size, and the march is on to harvest. Grapevines thrive on warm summer temperatures with cooler night temperatures. In a few weeks the grape berries will begin to change color which is called verasion, and the onset of the ripening of the grapes. At Domaine de Manion, once the berries begin verasion, we estimate we are about six weeks away from harvest.

I love the look of the vineyard this time of year because the vines are full, flowing in the wind, and unbridled. With the onset of verasion, we have to net each vineyard row and clip the nets together using clothespins. Birds and other wildlife will be eager to eat the grape clusters as the grapes continue to ripen and their sugar (brix) rises.

The Summer Vineyard at Domaine de Manion

The Summer Vineyard at Domaine de Manion

Bon Appétit and Bon Weekend….Bonnie

Ma Amie, Kathy
À Kathy’s Maison

À Kathy’s Maison

I have a dear friend who exudes “joie de vivre” whether she is here in San Diego, at her little stone house in Provence, or anywhere in the world. Ma Amie, Kathy Hurder. We are both Francophiles, and share the love of French country cooking, the wine, the copper, the markets, the brocantes, the lifestyle, and the beauty in the simplicity and quality of life.

With France opening up once again to tourists and foreigners, I remember with fond memories our last trip to France in 2019. Kathy and her charming husband, Ron Lauderbach, graciously invited us to their special corner of Provence. My husband, John, and I in turn invited them to share a weekend in Beaune, Burgundy, France, together a week later. We had so much fun, and yes, it was cherry season!

Sainte-Cécile-les Vignes Morning Market

Sainte-Cécile-les Vignes Morning Market

No need to buy cherries this morning, as Kathy and Ron have their own happy cherry trees in their “petite jardin.” When it is cherry season, you enjoy them fresh, but also make a Cherry Clafoutis.

Cherry Clafoutis is a very popular French dessert, simple and seasonal, in which you can easily exchange seasonal fruit of the moment. If I remember correctly, we made Mimi Thorisson’s Cherry Clafoutis from her first cookbook, A Kitchen in France, and in her 2013 blog post, which she shares the recipe along with her complementary Duck Burger recipe. Yum!

Kathy and Ron, in Medieval Village, Séguret, Provence and overlooking Sablet, Provence

Kathy and Ron, in Medieval Village, Séguret, Provence and overlooking Sablet, Provence

One of our incentives for a rendez-vous a week later in Beaune, besides the incredible Burgundy wine and regional food, was taking a “Day in Burgundy Cooking Class” with American ex-pats “mother daughter duo” Marjorie Taylor and Kendall Smith Franchini, at The Cook’s Atelier. Planned well in advance, Kathy and I were lucky to land the last two spots in a Saturday June cooking class. While at our cooking class, our fellas were happy to further explore Beaune and dabble in some wine tasting. Needless to say, it was an incredible day and experience, full of special memories. For more info on The Cook’s Atelier see below.

I can’t say enough about Beaune, Burgundy, and highly recommend spending some quality time there. It is really worth it to bike or hike into the surrounding world famous vineyards. There is a real sense and spirit of place, and the terroir is immaculately managed and revered.

Past and Present Merge in these Vineyards

Past and Present Merge in these Vineyards

A Special Burgundy Birthday for John

A Special Burgundy Birthday for John

It is a real gift to have “joie de vivre” and the ability to put a spark in other people’s lives, just by being your passionate self. Merci Kathy and Ron!

Well Fed and Content in Beaune

Well Fed and Content in Beaune

French Fabulous!

The Cook’s Atelier, by Marjorie Taylor and Kendall Smith Franchini, is one of the best cooking classes I have been to. From start to finish, it is a whirlwind for your senses. I often thought about them, through this pandemic. Was this small family business surviving, with no classes, no brick and mortar storefront retail? Were they writing a new cookbook? Well, good news, yes, and yes, and yes.

The Cook’s Atelier hosts regular one day classes, and also offers week long master classes. The Cook’s Atelier has taken this gift of time to expand their country home outside of Beaune, creating a large potager and teaching kitchen. They are now growing most of their own fruit and vegetables for their culinary classes, and in the week long master class will be bringing the class to their country setting for more culinary instruction and Burgundian experience. Adding to this, they have expanded into custom copper gardening tools, found on their website. Amazing.

Another Related and Past Blog Link, The Cook’s Atelier

Bon Appétit and Bon Weekend…Bonnie


Flowering Grapevines
Grapevines Flowering

Grapevines Flowering

Depending on weather, the end of May, the beginning of June, our vines flower on new grapevine shoots reaching towards the sky, and this starts the beginning genesis of grape clusters. Grapevines are self-pollinating, so each flower has the ability to turn into a single grape berry, and ultimately a very handsome cluster of grapes. It is not a showy flower, green in color, and often you have to look very close to see this process happening.

It is a vulnerable time in the vineyard, as strong winds, can harm these delicate flowering grapevines and affect your yield and quality of grapes for the rest of the growing year.

Happy Summer Grapevines Marching Towards Fall

Happy Summer Grapevines Marching Towards Fall

The grapevine shoots are still chartreuse green in color, but soon will become a darker mature forest green as the canopy grows and spills over the structured wiring keeping them in place. The grapevine clusters look plentiful, and so there is hope for a nice grape cluster yield and harvest in the fall.

For More Related Posts on Our Vineyard:

Domaine de Manion Vineyard

Bon Appétit and Bon Weekend…..Bonnie