After selling its wine for two years under the Okanagan
Crush Pad license, Bartier Brothers Winery will open its own winery and tasting
room next summer on Black Sage
Road .
It is the culmination of a long journey for Michael Bartier
who nurtured the ambition for his own winery not long after becoming a cellar
rat at Hawthorne Mountain Vineyards in 1995.
The winery is a partnership with his older brother, Donald (left),
an oil industry accountant and land manager in Calgary with a three-acre Gewurztraminer
vineyard in Summerland.
“Don and I have just received possession of the Cerqueira
Vineyard as of Jan. 1, and we'll be building a winery and visitor centre in the
coming months,” Michael told me in a recent email. “The address is 4815 Ryegrass Road
(formerly known as Road #9), Oliver. We're right around the corner from
Stoneboat, - great neighbours to have. Our property has frontage on both Ryegrass Road and Black Sage Road ,
though I think we'll keep our access on Ryegrass.”
Coincidental with this move, Michael has now left Okanagan
Crush Pad, where he had been the senior winemaker since 2010. New Zealander
Matt Dumayne, who joined OCP two years ago, takes over there.
Michael (right) has had his eye on the 15-acre Cerqueira Vineyard
for a long time. “I signed up the Cerqueira family to a long term contract when
I was with Township 7 [from 2001 through 2003]. The contract wasn't
renewed, so I was very happy to take on the contract myself.”
He and his brother negotiated an option to purchase it when
Joe Cerqueira retired and they have now exercised that option. The vineyard,
planted between 1999 and 2009, has four acres each of Merlot and Chardonnay,
2.4 acres of Cabernet Franc, 2.6 acres of Syrah and two acres of Sémillon.
“The site is very good,” Michael says. “At that latitude, Black Sage Road is
the divider between the sandy soils (above the road) and the gravel bar (below
the road). The gravel bar, of course, is all young (10,000 year old)
glacial till which is very calcium rich, amongst other minerals, - very typical
Okanagan subsoils material. A calcium carbonate crust - limestone - has
formed on all the rocks in the subsoils as a result of rainwater washing it
through the millennia, and then the calcium wicking back up towards the
surface. All of our rocks are crusted white and the small feeder roots
from the vines are ‘hugging’ these rocks. Every vintage, every batch from
this vineyard, the wines are fresh, fruity, and minerally. I don't care
what the minerality naysayers say, that limestone ends up in every glass of our
wine!”
That vineyard, along with his brother’s Gewürztraminer
block, is allowing him to build a portfolio of about 10 wines. The flagship red
is a Merlot-anchored blend called The Goal, made every vintage since 2009.
This spring, the winery is releasing a 2013 Cabernet Franc. “This
is a special wine, and one that we will continue with over the long term,”
Michael says. “The vines are finally mature enough that I'm happy with the
complexity of the wines coming from this block. There is a lot of
limestone in this [Cerqueira] vineyard and the resulting intersection of fruit
and minerality that shows in this wine is miraculous.”
He is also rather high on the Sémillon, which is surprising,
considering his long and successful love affair with Chardonnay.
“Notwithstanding the two wines I've discussed above,
and the fact that it's only $20 per bottle, the Sémillon is, hands down, my
favourite wine year after year,” Michael says. “Again, in this wine, the
fruit and minerality is astonishing, its age-ability is remarkable, and it is
so refreshing. We plan to tie the branding of our winery very closely to
this varietal.”
In one of my earlier books, I wrote about Michael’s
affection for Chardonnay (he makes both unoaked and barrel-fermented Chardonnay
at Bartier Brothers). The grape became one of his passions in 1998 when he did
a vintage in Australia
with the Thomas Hardy winery. “I was working with the best maker of white wine
in the southern hemisphere,” he says, referring to a winemaker named Tom
Newton. “He had a passion for Chardonnay and his excitement passed on to me.” After
coming back to the Okanagan, Bartier made award-winning Chardonnay in several
cellars.
The son of an accountant, Michael was born in Kelowna in 1967. He and
his brother, who was born in 1968, grew up in Summerland. A lean mountaineer
and passionate cyclist, Michael has a degree from the University of Victoria
in recreational administration. However, on graduating in 1990, he took a job
with a wine marketing agency. “I wasn’t interested in the recreational field,”
he told me later. “By the time I realized that, I was too far along in my
degree to stop those studies.”
The job with the wine agency provided the opportunity to
visit wineries in France and
in the United States .
“It gave me the interest and the passion for wine,” Bartier recalled. One side
of the business that did not appeal to him, however, was selling wine. “I am
not a salesperson,” he admits.
He left the agency in 1995 to return to the Okanagan,
intending to pick up his original interest in the outdoors. “My dream was to
become a professional climbing guide. I came out to the Okanagan to boost my
résumé on difficult climbing routes.” Those include the Skaha Bluffs just south
of Penticton ,
one of the world’s more popular climbing venues. Ultimately, Michael decided
this was definitely not for him. While he considered himself a capable ice
climber and mountaineer, he concluded he was “a mediocre rock climber.”
While working on his climbing skills, Michael took a job as
a cellar hand at Hawthorne Mountain Vineyards. By the end of a season, he had
been promoted to assistant winemaker, leading him to abandon professional
climbing. “I realized it was just too dangerous an occupation,” he says. “And I
was having too much fun in the wine cellar.”
He applied himself to this new job with gusto, taking
extension courses from various American winemaking schools to underpin his
career with professional skills. By the time he left Hawthorne Mountain
(now See Ya Later Ranch) after the 2001 vintage, he was crafting some of the
Okanagan’s best Chardonnay wines.
“Like a lot of careers, I got into this quite by accident,”
he says. “I feel really privileged. I was at the right place at the right time.
I can’t see anyone now coming into the wine industry as wet behind the ears as
I was, and rising so fast.”
After Hawthorne
Mountain , he was
consulting winemaker at Stag’s Hollow for the 2002 vintage. At the same time,
he was developing Township 7 Okanagan’s property where, once again, he repeated
his touch with Chardonnay. In the 2003 Canadian Wine Awards competition,
Township 7’s 2002 Chardonnay was judged not only the best Chardonnay but the
year’s best Canadian white wine. Two years earlier, the Hawthorne Mountain 2000
Gold Label Chardonnay had been the top Chardonnay in the same competition
He left Township 7 Okanagan in 2004 to join Road 13 and
moved from there in 2010 to Okanagan Crush Pad.
While he and his brother get Bartier Brothers established,
he will continue to consult with several other wineries. The current plan is to
build Bartier Brothers to about 5,000 cases a year.
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