on the road: wine country gardens

Heading into Marin

The day­light was end­ing as we crossed the bridge into the wine coun­try north of San Francisco.

Marin at dusk

Things were devel­op­ing that gor­geous warm tint that you only see for a few min­utes of the day. Peo­ple had set aside the next day to visit some winer­ies, and this gor­geous evening was the best prepa­ra­tion you could ask for.

Tasting glass

We stopped at three winer­ies, and you pick up pretty quickly that the vine­yards are inter­ested in pro­mot­ing a lifestyle as part of the process of send­ing you home with a few bot­tles of wine. To set the mood, each loca­tion we vis­ited played its own riff on the basic for­mula that winer­ies fol­low: a tast­ing bar, per­son­able servers, a gift shop, and–most inter­est­ing for me–some sort of gar­den set­ting around the facility.

Rodney Strong oak barrels

Rodney Strong stainless tanks

Stop #1 was the largest, most indus­trial place that we were to visit that day, Rod­ney Strong Vine­yards. You could stroll around an ele­vated perch and take a look at the oak casks and the stain­less tanks hold­ing their next bottlings.

Rodney Strong planter boxes

Set in the mid­dle of your basic pic­turesque Sonoma County vine­yards, their take seemed to be fairly min­i­mal­ist, that the grapes around the win­ery were gar­den enough. But they did have some attrac­tive planter boxes lin­ing the steps ascend­ing to the tast­ing room.

Rodney Strong Calibrachoa and zinnias

Being high sum­mer, their plant­i­ngs fea­tured bril­liant zin­nias, marigolds and cal­i­bra­choa in what I’d call a real-world plant­ing, selec­tions that any­one could find at their local gar­den cen­ter, noth­ing too fussy or scary or exotic.

The mes­sage they wanted to con­vey through their set­ting: We want to make your visit plea­sur­able, but we’re pri­mar­ily about the wine. Our wines might be a bet­ter value because we don’t splurge on the unnec­es­sary the­atrics.

Across the park­ing lot was des­ti­na­tion #2, J Vine­yards. The approach to the front door passes casual-looking plant­i­ngs of grasses, sedges and flax.

J vineyards stones and grass like plants

In Design­ing with Plants by Piet Oudolff and Noel Kings­bury, the authors cau­tion against mix­ing plant­i­ngs of dif­fer­ent grasses. But here the tech­nique of mix­ing dif­fer­ent plants with strong lin­ear forms suc­ceeds beau­ti­fully. (Def­i­nitely a case in point that design guide­lines are meant to be broken.)

J Vineyards seating over pond

To get in the tast­ing room you cross a lit­tle bridge over a pond teem­ing with water plants. The hard­scape is cut through with strong lin­ear ele­ments, but the plants seem to defy the geom­e­try, with clumps of one kind of plant cas­cad­ing from one level to the next, not accen­tu­at­ing the struc­ture like box­woods plant­ing along a dri­ve­way. Winetasting–with optional fin­ger foods–can hap­pen indoors, or on the patio over­look­ing the garden.

The mes­sage they wanted to con­vey through their set­ting: We’re not the least expen­sive win­ery out there, but what’s wrong with an occa­sional splurge every now and then?.

Potted plant in Healdsburg

Over­sized pots with spiky plants were a com­mon fea­ture. This blue pot­ted suc­cu­lent was set next to a rough woven vine fence in down­town Healds­burg, where we stopped for lunch. I’m sure their gar­dener pruned the pointy lower leaves off the plant to avoid injury to the masses pass­ing through, but I per­son­ally hate to see gor­geous sym­met­ri­cal plants dis­fig­ured this way.

Mazzocco vineyard glazed pot

Our last win­ery stop, Maz­zocco Vine­yards, also fea­tured a spiky plant–a flax–planted in a big pot–this one a model with beau­ti­fully drip­ping glaze.

Mazzocco Vineyard outdoor seating

Mazzocco patio

The small­est of the three stops that day, the win­ery fea­tured low-growing drought-tolerant plants and some annu­als set in a small the­ater set that evoked a casual resort set in the mid­dle of oaked foothills. A berm along the adja­cent road­way cre­ated a sense of shel­ter and avoided the road noises that would have spoiled the mood.

The set­ting was sim­ple and casual, noth­ing so spec­tac­u­lar that you had to stop to look at it, but a pleas­ant place to relax and spend part of an afternoon.

The mes­sage they wanted to con­vey through their set­ting: We’re all about rus­tic ele­gance. Our wines are direct and con­nected to the land. (Their offer­ings hap­pened to offer a large num­ber of vineyard-designated bot­tlings of zin­fan­del, many with its own strong character.)

My favorites that day?
Wines: Maz­zocco. (I didn’t sam­ple at the first stop.)
Gar­dens: J.

But they’d all be worth a visit. (And my thanks to our des­ig­nated dri­ver that day!)

August 15 2009 06:09 am | Categories: gardeninglandscape designplaces | Tags:

3 Responses to “on the road: wine country gardens”

  1. Country Mouse on 17 Aug 2009 at 8:33 am #

    Win­ery land­scap­ing is inter­est­ing. Our local small win­ery has nice land­scap­ing, drought tol­er­ant but not pre­dom­i­nantly native. I wrote ask­ing them if they would be inter­ested down the road in sell­ing the seeds/plants from the sunny bank below their win­ery where I have been col­lect­ing seeds as I walk the road. Haven’t heard back yet — but seems like that “lifestyle” ele­ment they could be pro­mot­ing along with their local wines.

  2. laurence fosgate on 20 Aug 2009 at 4:04 pm #

    Read­ing your beau­ti­ful blog sat­is­fies me in every way, the writ­ing con­tent and style, the beau­ti­ful pho­tos, the diverse sub­ject mat­ter. Per­fect accom­pa­ni­ment to a glass of blue­berry tea just before I pre­pare for bed. I’ll dream of Cal­i­for­nia gar­dens tonight for sure.

  3. susan morrison (garden-chick) on 21 Aug 2009 at 8:05 am #

    I’m with you — check­ing out the gar­dens is my favorite part of wine tast­ing. Did you buy any wine? I’m always afraid I’m just caught up in the expe­ri­ence and that when I get the wine home it will end up just tast­ing ordinary.

    Sounds like you’ve had a won­der­ful time ram­bling through California.

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