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The ice cream fire started on September 27 and has since devoured 27,000 hectares. Several of the wineries in the area have gotten in his way.
Vincent Tofanelli, a third-generation winemaker, saw ominous smoke in the distance.
– I knew it was coming, but I could still go in another direction. All I could do, because there was no electricity, so I had no water, was move some things, like tractors, and trust the fire department.
Describe the feeling as a mixture of hopelessness and despair.
– Unfortunately the fire moved very fast during the night (towards Monday). It was catastrophic. Firefighters were able to save a small building, but the rest were lost, he says.
What was destroyed was the house that belonged to his grandfather, who started the business in 1929, as well as a barn and old equipment from the history of the estate.
– Napa Valley has become very modern with luxurious homes. The little farm was part of what it used to be and many people hear from them and say they used to stop by to see what it was like before, says Tofanelli.
90-year-old vines grow in the vineyard. They did it. Creepers are generally fire resistant and can act as barriers to ground fires.
– They did well, so I can continue my agricultural business.
A heat wave in early September caused the grapes to ripen earlier than usual, so they were already harvested. But Tofanelli, which has its own winery and supplies other winemakers, had to send grapes to the lab to make sure they weren’t affected by smoke that swept through the area from a fire in August.
That the grapes were already sold was fortunate, because otherwise they would probably have been lost.
– I think the proximity to the fire had given flavor to the wine, says Vincent Tofanelli and continues:
– I don’t know if we could have gotten back financially after that.
Half the fire out of control
Some wineries in the US state have lost harvests, either because the grapes were damaged or because stocks were destroyed. Others have had equipment and buildings destroyed by fire.
The winemaker Castello di Amorosa had a building with ripening tanks, a bottling plant, a laboratory and 120,000 bottles of wine destroyed in the fire.
– There were some neighbors who when they were driving saw large fires on the side of the road. These were areas with 10-foot-tall flames and the wind was strong, says Kim Sullivan, who has worked at the facility since 2008.
The company expects costs of up to the equivalent of SEK 180 million.
– It was heartbreaking, devastating, he says of the feeling when he saw the devastation.
He describes Castello di Amorosa as one of the largest wine producers that only sells directly to customers.
– There is no time to cry, even if you are sad. We have to accelerate, because business continues, he says.
“We are resilient”
At least 20 warehouses have been affected in various ways, and the California Fire Department says the fire is still half under control.
– Our little part of Napa Valley was hit hard. Fifteen houses and three warehouses were probably burned down, says Vincent Tofanelli.
– The main problems we face are long-term. We all know that climate change affects wines and all fires. I have been growing for 50 years and I see how it is changing. And the last ten years… wow, he says.
– But we are a very resistant industry. To grow and make good wine, it won’t go away. We will be back.
Facts: Napa Valley
Napa Valley in California, USA is a world famous wine region, west of Sacramento. Here there are more than 400 vineyards growing wine on some 16,600 hectares.
Only four percent of California wine is produced in the region. California, in turn, accounts for 90 percent of all US production.
In addition to producing wine, Napa Valley is a popular tourist destination.
Sources: Napavinters, Napavalley.com, Visitnapavalley.com