Four years after opening its tasting room on Abbotsford’s
Mt. Lehman Road, Singletree Winery plans to open a winery and a second tasting
room on Naramata Road by mid-year.
It is only the second winery in BC with wine shops in both
the Fraser Valley and the Okanagan. The other is Township 7 Vineyards &
Winery, which has a winery in Langley that opened in 2001 and a second outside
Penticton that opened in 2004.
Singletree has just acquired Ledlin Family Vineyards, a
small winery that opened last summer on Naramata Road. In January, Fred and
Erica Ledlin, the owners, listed the winery for sale at $1,850,000. Singletree
has not disclosed what it paid.
Singletree was opened in 2015 by Andrew Etsell, his wife,
Laura Spreckel, and Andrew’s parents, Garnet and Debbie. It is located on a
vineyard where planting began in 2010. Now 13 acres in size, it grows
Siegerrebe, Pinot Gris, Pinot Noir, Chardonnay and what may be the only planting
of Grüner Veltliner in the Fraser Valley.
Singletree’s first five vintages, 2013 through 2017, have
been made at the Okanagan Crush Pad Winery in Summerland. As production has
grown – Singletree made 3,500 cases of wine in 2017 – the Etsells began planning
a processing facility on their Mt. Lehman property, where they already have a tasting
room.
“We had gone through the design phases and we were moving to
the building phase,” Andrew says. “But prices just kept going up and up for
building in the valley. And the time line would not have been met for us to do
crush there in 2018.”
In January, they began looking at wineries in the interior
that were for sale. The Ledlin property appealed because it is on Naramata Road,
one of the Okanagan’s best locations for wine tourism. As well, Singletree has
major grape contracts with vineyards on the Naramata Bench. “It was an easy
decision to choose Naramata,” Andrew says.
The Ledlin winery had been started by Fred Ledlin, a former
professional hockey player (18 years in Europe) and then a Vancouver builder.
Several years ago, he and Erica, looking for a summer residence in the
Okanagan, came across this five-acre property on Naramata Road, which was in
receivership. The 3.5 acre vineyard was being uprooted just as they bought the
property. They managed to save 14 rows of Merlot and Pinot Gris and decided to
replant the remainder with Cabernet Franc and Pinot Blanc.
“We designed this as our weekend getaway,” Fred told me in
an interview last year. “Now we had a vineyard. What do we do with the grapes?
We decided to open up a winery at the front end of the property.”
The winery opened last summer with wines from the 2015 and
2016 vintages, made with estate fruit and with purchased grapes. Wine was also
made in the facility in the fall of 2017. Singletree, with its own flourishing
brand, decided not to buy any Ledlin inventory.
“It seemed to me that there was a dream,” Andrew speculates
on why the Ledlin winery was put on the market so quickly. “After the first
year of being open, they realized how hard wineries are, and decided to sell.
For us, it was great timing.”
The Etsell family to add additional equipment to the
2,000-square-foot Ledlin facility, with plans to double the size next year to
accommodate Singletree’s growing production. Andrew also plans upgrades to the
vineyard, although there is little additional acreage suitable for vines.
“There were plans to build a house there,” Andrew says. “We
are not planning to build a residence there. We will be based out of the valley
here.” Two rooms in the Ledlin winery that had been designed as bed and
breakfast suites will be used by the new owners and their staff.
“I am looking at splitting my time between the two stores,”
Andrew says. “I will be up in the Okanagan one week and down in the Fraser
Valley the other. That gives me somewhere to stay.”
Singletree Naramata Bench, as the Etsells plan to call their
winery, gives them the opportunity to expand sales exposure for their wines.
The intent is to have Fraser Valley wines available there as well as
Singletree’s Okanagan wines.
Singletree has just begun to release its 2017 wines, which
were made by Andrew and consulting winemaker Matt Dumayne. Andrew, who trained
in horticulture, has mentored with Matt and has taken professional winemaking
courses.
“Even when we have the production facility this year, Matt
will still be helping me with the wines,” Andrew says. “We work really well
together. It is nice to have someone who knows the in and outs of winemaking
and has a similar style to how I like to make wine.”
Here are notes on the new releases.
Singletree Pinot Gris
2017 ($17.30). The estate-grown fruit was fermented and aged in stainless
steel. The purity of focus is remarkable: crisp, fresh aromas and flavours of
citrus and pear with a lively finish. 91.
Singletree Sauvignon
Blanc 2017 ($17.30) While previous vintages had been fermented and aged in
barrel, this wine – again from estate-grown grapes – was fermented and aged in
stainless steel. Once again it shows a laser-like brightness, with aromas and
flavours of lime and lemon. The finish is tangy. 90.
Singletree Grüner
Veltliner 2017 ($17.30). This is the winery’s second vintage of estate-grown
Grüner Veltliner. It is a late ripening Austrian white that delivers plenty of
flavour and aroma from a Fraser Valley terroir. It begins with aromas of
grapefruit and herbs, leading to flavours of lime, grapefruit and cantaloupe.
The wine has good weight on the palate. 91.
Singletree Sieggie
2017 ($16). This Fraser Valley-grown Siegerrebe, arguable Singletree’s
flagship varietal. The wine begins with aromas of spice and citrus. On the
palate, it is a bowl of tropical fruits – lychee, grapefruit and melon – with a
juicy texture and a crisp finish. 91.
Singletree Rosé 2017
($19.48). This wine is made with organic Pinot Noir from a West Kelowna
vineyard. The wine has a delicate pink hue with aromas and flavours of
strawberry and rhubarb. The finish is tangy and crisp. 91.
Singletree 2016 Wild
Siggy ($21.60). Fermented on the skins with wild yeast, this is
Singletree’s natural wine. I have never been a big fan of natural wines but
this is one I would drink with pleasure. The wine has a light gold hue,
dramatic aromas of citrus and honey that lead to flavours of peach and pear.
Rich in texture, the wine finishes with spice notes. 91.
Singletree Pinot Noir
2015 ($21.66). The wine is made with grapes from the Lazy Dog Vineyard on
the Naramata Bench. Dark in colour, the wine was aged 11 months in new French
oak. Subtle notes of oak mingle with aromas and flavours of cherry. The wine
also has some of the classic forest floor notes of Pinot Noir. 91.
Singletree Merlot
2016 (not yet released). The wine is approachable now but Andrew will age
it in bottle until the fall, allowing further development of the cassis aromas
and flavours of black currant and black cherry. The texture is full and the
finish is long. 92.
Singletree Harness
2014 ($30.35 for 275 cases). This is blend of 51.3% Merlot and 48.7%
Cabernet Sauvignon. Made with grapes from a great red vintage, this wine was
aged in barrel for 18 months. It begins with aromas of cassis, black fruits and
spice leading to flavours of blackcurrant and black cherry mingled with notes
of leather and chocolate. 91.
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